Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Picassos Guernica Essay -- Essays Papers
Picassos Guernica  	           While it may seem at first glance that Guernica, by Pablo Picasso, is a political statement against the tragedy of the bombing of a small Basque town during  the Spanish Civil War, this painting holds connotations beyond the syllogism for  which it is given credit.  Picasso, unlike Romantic period artists, who are  attributed to great political propaganda, is not suggesting an emotionally based  judgment should be made about the contemporary event, but rather a focus on  the contemplation of the forces of good and evil at work throughout timeless  humanity.       	 On the afternoon of April 26, 1937, German forces under the command of  the Spanish fascist leader Francisco Franco embarked on the first aerial bombing  of a civilian target, the small town of Guernica.  The attack was due to the conflict  in Spain, the Spanish Civil War: an issue of Democracy against Fascism.  The war  heightened the threat of Communism and Fascism in Western Europe to a new  level.  Francoââ¬â¢s attack on the small town, a center of culture in Basque, made it  clear that his forces were strong and unrelenting.  His allegiance with German  forces spawned one of the most tumultuous times in modern history.  The aerial  bombing of Guernica became a symbol of his unmerciful, cruel political power.   Guernica was almost completely destroyed.  News of the mounting death toll  spread rapidly.    	However, universally, the impact of the Guernica bombing could have been  minimal.  While Spain would surely never have forgotten Francoââ¬â¢s reign of terror  and its zenith with the bombing of Guernica, Picasso contributed an everlasting  reminder to the entire world of the threat of Fascism and the evil of unrelenting  power.  Having been invited to contribute a piece to the Spanish Pavilion for  Parisââ¬â¢ Worldââ¬â¢s Fair in 1937, Picasso was inspired by the grief of Spain to present  an image that would make the most powerful statement against Franco yet.  His  creation became not only the symbol of the Spanish crisis but of protest of  Fascism for all time.  Not only is the size of the mural overwhelming, but the  shocking images that mix classic symbols with modern technique provide an  emotion and passion that is unforgettable.    	While passion and empathy undeniably drove Picasso to choose his  subject, Guernica, it is not the fruit of spontaneous emotion, but of a  ...              ...  agenda is unworthy of praise because he was most focused on creating more a  shocking piece for his exhibition, in which the tragedy was merely an outlet for his  desire.  However, Picassoââ¬â¢s careful treatment of the subject, the fury with which  can be seen in him through the grotesque distortions of his figures, and the  sympathy for which he begs of humanity in the helpless, horrified faces which  look upon the world from his mural, make an everlasting impression on  civilization of the brutality of war.  Whether Picassoââ¬â¢s  political agenda was his  priority is certainly debatable, but Picasso once said, ââ¬Å"I like what continuesâ⬠.    Guernica must be a source of great satisfaction to him.    Works Cited    Becraft, Melvin E.  Picassoââ¬â¢s Guernica.  New York: The New York Times Company, 1981.  	    Blunt, Anthony.  Picassoââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËGuernicaââ¬â¢.  London: Oxford University Press, 1969.    		  Fisch, Ederhard. ââ¬ËGuernicaââ¬â¢ by Picasso.  London and Toronto: Associate University Press, 1988.      Russell, Frank D.  Picassoââ¬â¢s Guernica. Montclair, NJ:  Allanheld, Osmun & Co., 1980.    Zervos, Christian.  ââ¬Å" Historire dââ¬â¢un tableau de Picassoâ⬠, Cahiers dââ¬â¢ Arte.  Vol.12 no. 4-5, Paris, 1937, pp. 109-111.                      
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