(Paris) Genius or monster? In any case, inexhaustible subject of fascination. On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of his death, Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) is celebrated through some forty exhibitions around the world, promising to explore all his facets.

“Picasso eats everything and apparently we’re still hungry,” laughs Olivier Widmaier-Picasso, his grandson, interviewed by AFP. He says he is “fascinated by the number of museum curators, historians and scholars who continue to find angles of study”.

The ceramics of Picasso, Picasso and feminism, white in Picasso, Picasso under the eye of famous photographers, the young Picasso in Paris, Picasso sculptor… The monument is combined in all sauces as part of “his year”, celebrated in France and Spain.

He remains “above all,” said Bernard Blistène, former director of the National Museum of Modern Art at the Center Pompidou in Paris, praising, like other specialists, unanimous, the “genius” of Guernica’s father and the Demoiselles d’Avignon.

“The devastating power of Picasso’s work compared to that of others, the permanent invention, the crossing of all the great currents of modernity, the experimentation for more than 80 years (Picasso painted until his death at 91, editor’s note), the desire to please and displease… All of this is unmatched,” he added to AFP.

And after hundreds of exhibitions dedicated to him, he remains an “inexhaustible” museum resource, adds Emmanuel Guigon, director of the Picasso Museum in Barcelona.

With the movement

Former curator of the Picasso Museum, Émilie Bouvard hopes that this anniversary will mark “the beginning of a salutary process” in the way we approach this “popular” artist, who “embodied a commitment that we continue to talk about and presented himself like a man close to everyone and who was”.

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“We have to stop talking about the women who crossed his life as ‘muses’. Some committed suicide, others went mad. The only one who got out of it was Françoise Gilot, who was also the only one to have left him,” she adds.

A painter now based in the United States, she described Picasso as a “tyrannical, superstitious and selfish being” in a best-selling book Living with Picasso, published in 1964.

“Beyond his machismo, Picasso is someone who appropriated things, beings, possessed them with paroxysmal feelings of suffering, of pain. He took an interest in archaic questions of the self and the related violence with a certain courage, but he made those around him drool. To address this question is to speak differently, but with accuracy, of Picasso,” continues Ms. Bouvard.

“Violence” and “sexuality in art” are themes addressed during a cycle of lectures in Paris, while an exhibition on Picasso and feminism will open in June at the Brooklyn Museum in New York, with curator exhibition the actress Hannah Gadsby, particularly virulent against Picasso in a successful show on Netflix.

Less controversial and more festive, in Paris, the museum that bears his name has been transformed by British designer Paul Smith.

“A bet” for the director of the museum, Cécile Debray, whose institution pilots commemorations in France and which “is not intended to be a mausoleum”.

On the contrary, the objective is to “open up to debates and reflection on Picasso in order to reread the work and show its vitality”, she underlines.

In addition to the exhibitions, many conferences are planned this year, as well as the inauguration in the fall in Paris of a research center, a stone’s throw from the Picasso Museum, and an international symposium at the same time at UNESCO.