Booker Prize-winning author John Berger gives us a stunning critical
assessment of Pablo Picasso: At the height of his powers, Picasso was
the artist as revolutionary: breaking through the niceties of form in
order to mount a direct challenge to the values of his time. At the
height of his fame, he was the artist as royalty: incalculably wealthy,
universally idolized--and wholly isolated.
Berger--one of this century's most insightful cultural
historians--trains his penetrating gaze upon this most prodigious and
enigmatic painter and on the Spanish landscape and very particular
culture that shaped his life and work. Writing with a novelist's
sensuous evocation of character and detail, and drawing on an erudition
that embraces history, politics, and art, Berger follows Picasso from
his childhood in Malaga to the Blue Period and Cubism, from the creation
of Guernica to the painted etchings of his final years. He gives us
the full measure of Picasso's triumphs and unsparing reckoning of their
cost--in exile, in loneliness, and in a desolation that drove him, in
his last works, into an old man's furious and desperate frenzy at the
beauty of what he could no longer create.