17. The narrator suggests that the girl in the song is both an art lover and high spirited, as she stole a painting from which artist?
From Quiz Where Do You Go To (My Lovely)?
Answer:
Pablo Picasso
"And the painting you stole from Picasso, your loveliness goes on and on, yes it does."
Pablo Picasso was born in Malaga in 1881. Demonstrating a natural artistic talent from an early age, he was entered by his father into the Barcelona Academy of Art at the age of thirteen, having works publicly exhibited while still in his teens. He first visited Paris in 1900, and he divided his time between the French capital and Barcelona, coinciding with his 'Blue Period'. By 1905, Picasso had become a favourite of the American collectors Leo and Gertrude Stein, who championed his work, with Gertrude becoming a significant patron, who exhibited Picasso's work at her Paris salons. During this time, the artist went through further periods, with his work dominated by oranges in the 'Rose Period', and seeing significant African influences in his 'African Period', before he came to be one of the guiding founders of the Cubist movement. In 1917, Picasso visited Italy for the first time, and his work turned again, first towards Neoclassicism, before adopting Surrealism in the mid 1920s. In 1937, he was commissioned by the Spanish government to produce a mural for the 1937 World Fair in Paris. In April, upon hearing of the German bombing of the town of Guernica, he abandoned his original plan, and instead produced "Guernica", which became arguably his most famous work. Remaining in Paris during the Second World War, he was unable to exhibit as a result of the Nazi's views of his type of work, and instead wrote poetry and prose. After the war, Picasso returned to painting, with yet another change in style, this time looking at reinterpreting the work of old masters. This fluctuation of style continued in his final years, with the artist producing a late flurry of new work before his death at Mougins in April 1973.