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| | Pablo Picasso - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Picasso's father, José Ruiz y Blasco (who also recognized the potential of Picasso's art talent and taught his son everything he knew about painting), was himself a painter, and for most of his life a professor of art at the School of Fine Arts and Crafts and a curator of a local museum. |  | | Pablo Ruiz Picasso (October 25, 1881 – April 8, 1973) was a Spanish painter and sculptor. |  | | In 1918, Picasso married Olga Khoklova, a ballerina with Sergei Diaghilev's troupe, for whom Picasso was designing a ballet, Parade, in Rome. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pablo_Picasso
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| | MSN Encarta - Picasso |
 | | Picasso’s painting Le Moulin de la Galette (1900, Guggenheim Museum, New York City) revealed his interest in the subject matter of Parisian nightlife and in the style of French painter Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, a style that verged on caricature. |  | | Pablo Picasso (1881-1973), Spanish painter, who is widely acknowledged to be the most important artist of the 20th century. |  | | Among Picasso’s many contributions to the history of art, his most important include pioneering the modern art movement called cubism, inventing collage as an artistic technique, and developing assemblage (constructions of various materials) in sculpture. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefArticle.aspx?refid=761569324
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| | Picasso, Pablo on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Picasso was for a time saluted as a forerunner of surrealism, but his intellectual approach was basically antithetical to the irrational aesthetic of the surrealist painters. |  | | Picasso para todos.(Pablo Picasso, pintor Español)(TT: Picasso for everybody.)(TA: Pablo Picasso, Spanish painter) |  | | Picasso et Aragon, incomprehensions et censures.(Pablo Picasso in the poetry of Louis Aragon)(text in French)(Critical Essay) |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/p/picasso.asp
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| | Pablo Picasso |
 | | Pablo Picasso: The Sculptures is catalogue raisonn of Picasso's sculptures, a seminal work informed by conversations between the author, Picasso specialist Werner Spies, and Picasso himself. |  | | For years Pablo Picasso's sculptural oeuvre was one of the best-kept secrets of 20th century art. |  | | Pablo Picasso: The Lithographs is the first collection of such work to list every printed sheet as an individual work and thus constitutes the most reliable reference work for the artist's lithographic oeuvre. |
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http://www.adhikara.com/pagine_libreria/pablo_picasso.htm
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| | NGA - Picasso: The Early Years (Teachers' Guide) |
 | | Picasso's painting was inspired by a group of performers he and his colleagues befriended at the Cirque Medrano, which had quarters near the artist's Paris studio in Montmartre. |  | | Pablo Picasso, one of the most dynamic and influential artists of our century, achieved success in drawing, printmaking, sculpture, and ceramics as well as in painting. |  | | Picasso moved to Paris in 1904 and settled in a dilapidated section of Montmartre, a working-class quarter. |
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http://www.nga.gov/education/picteach.htm
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| | Pablo Picasso. Biography- Olga's Gallery |
 | | Picasso and the Invention of Cubism by Pepe Karmel, Pablo Picasso. |  | | Picasso’s image of himself had changed, and this was probably reflected in more conventional language he adopted in his art, the way in which he consciously made use of artistic traditions and was almost never provocative. |  | | Picasso: The Art of the Poster Catalogue Raisonne by Marc Gundel, Rene Hirner, Pablo Picasso, Kunstmuseum Heidenheim. |
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http://www.abcgallery.com/P/picasso/picassobio.html
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| | Pablo Picasso |
 | | Pablo Picasso, born in Spain, was a child prodigy who was recognized as such by his art-teacher father, who ably led him along. |  | | The style was created by Picasso in tandem with his great friend Georges Braque, and at times, the works were so alike it was hard for each artist quickly to identify their own. |  | | Picasso was a little afraid of the painting and didn't show it except to a small circle of friends until 1916, long after he had completed his early Cubist pictures. |
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http://www.artchive.com/artchive/P/picasso.html
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| | Pablo Picasso |
 | | Pablo Ruiz y Picasso was born in Malaga,Spain, on October 2, 1881 of Jose Ruiz Blasco Picasso and Maria Picasso y Lopez. |  | | Between 1908 and 1911 Picasso and George Braque painted landscape paintings in a new style. |  | | Pablo Picasso has said that he was not a surrealist, but many of his pictures have a surrealist feel to them. |
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http://abstractart.20m.com/Pablo_Picasso.html
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| | Spain in Cyberspain: PICASSO |
 | | In his life time, Picasso had already become a synonym for "modern art." Today he still considered a myth, a legend of the arts; his poise as an artist is intricate and vibrant in a myriad of facets. |  | | By the time of his death, Picasso was recognized universally as the foremost artist of his era, and possibly of the century. |  | | Son of a painter and master drafter, Picasso was trained so that by the age of nine he began to paint and sketch. |
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http://www.cyberspain.com/passion/picasso.htm
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| | CGFA- Bio: Pablo Picasso |
 | | Pablo Ruiz y Picasso was a Spanish painter and sculptor, generally considered the greatest artist of the 20th century. |  | | Picasso's genius manifested itself early: at the age of 10 he made his first paintings, and at 15 he performed brilliantly on the entrance examinations to Barcelona's School of Fine Arts. |  | | Born in Málaga on October 25, 1881, Picasso was the son of José Ruiz Blasco, an art teacher, and María Picasso y Lopez. |
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http://cgfa.sunsite.dk/picasso/picasso_bio.htm
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| | Pablo Picasso |
 | | Pablo Picasso (1881-1973), Spanish painter and sculptor, was the most influential artist of the 20th century. |  | | A prolific artist for all of his 91 years, Picasso continually explored daring and unpredictable new directions in art. |  | | During Picasso's early years in Paris, he painted with mostly blue and rose tones as he studied line, shape, and value. |
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http://www.sachem.k12.ny.us/schools/tecumseh/seymen/picasso.htm
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| | Picasso: EnchantedLearning.com |
 | | Pablo Picasso was trained as an artist in Spain, but moved to Paris in 1900, when he was 19 years old. |  | | Pablo Picasso (October 25, 1881 - April 8, 1973) was a Spanish artist who revolutionized painting, drawing, sculpture, and ceramics (pottery). |  | | Picasso's "blue period," (1901 to 1904), was followed by his "rose period," (1904-1906), during which Picasso used warmer colors in his paintings. |
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http://www.enchantedlearning.com/artists/picasso
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| | Pablo Picasso |
 | | Pablo Picasso the n took a trip to France where he discovered the work of master artist Toulouse Lautrec, perhaps it was Lautrec's fascination with the female form, and with street walkers in particular that influenced Picasso to paint Les Demoiselles d'Avignon", the piece which brought on his first big break. |  | | Pablo Picasso had many women in his life, from Fernande Olivier, and Eva Gouel, to Olga Koklova, a Russian ballerina whom he had met around the same time he met composer Igor Stravinsky. |  | | A decade later, young Pablo Picasso learned how to paint from his father, who had been appointed teacher at the Da Guarda art school in La Coruna. |
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http://www.famouspainter.com/pablo.htm
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| | Pablo Picasso The Sculptures |
 | | Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) is one of the great artists of the 20th century. |  | | The sculpture belongs to Picasso's assemblages which he began in the early 1940s when he came across an old bicycle saddle and a rusty pair of handlebars on a scrap heap. |  | | I would even go a step further: although the paintings and graphic works are, from the art history point of view, more important, the sculptures mark the highlights of his career since they better and more openly express his inventive force and his humor than the rest of his oeuvre. |
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http://www.cosmopolis.ch/english/cosmo9/pablopicasso.htm
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| | Pablo Picasso Paintings Prints and Biography |
 | | Picasso érotique is organized by the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the Musée national Picasso and the Réunion des musées nationaux in co-production with the Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume, Paris, and the Museu Picasso, Barcelona. |  | | Picasso érotique opens, appropriately enough, with an installation evoking a fin-de-siècle brothel - the setting both for many of the painter's earliest sexual exploits and for his first large body of erotic drawings. |  | | The following galleries document the importance of erotic subjects during the crucial period from 1904, when Picasso moved to Paris, to the completion, in the spring of 1907, of Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, a depiction of five prostitutes that is regarded as one of the most important paintings in the history of modern art. |
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http://www.picasso.com
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| | Guggenheim Collection - Artist - Picasso - Biography |
 | | Pablo Picasso was born on October 25, 1881, in Málaga, Spain. |  | | Among the enormous number of Picasso exhibitions that were held during the artist’s lifetime, those at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1939 and the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris, in 1955 were most significant. |  | | From 1925 into the 1930s, Picasso was involved to a certain degree with the Surrealists, and from the fall of 1931 he was especially interested in making sculpture. |
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http://www.guggenheimcollection.org/site/artist_bio_126.html
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| | The Art Institute of Chicago: Art Access |
 | | Pablo Picasso dominated the development of the visual arts during the first half of the 20th century. |  | | In the paintings of his Blue Period (1901-1904), such as The Old Guitarist, Picasso worked with a monochromatic palette, flattened forms, and tragic, sorrowful themes. |  | | Along with Georges Braque, Picasso is best known as one of the creators of Cubism, though he utilized many styles during his career. |
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http://www.artic.edu/artaccess/AA_Modern/pages/MOD_1.shtml
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| | ArtandCulture Artist: Pablo Picasso |
 | | A virtual exhibition of portraits by Picasso with an introduction by Claude Picasso. |  | | Left in a void, Picasso exchanged Cubism for a kind of neo-classical Surrealism, a language of personal symbols drawn from mythology; foremost among these symbols was the minotaur. |  | | Insistent Presence in Picasso's Portrait of Gertrude Stein |
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http://www.artandculture.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/ACLive.woa/wa/artist?id=163
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| | Artguide Northwest -- Pablo Picasso Ceramics |
 | | But it was Picasso's matching of his rapid-fire brushwork to the necessity of working quickly with fast-drying glaze and clay that suited him so well and brought the appearance of unprecedented spontaneity to a time-consuming craft. |  | | So wrote the man who facilitated Pablo Picasso's endeavors in clay, Georges Ramie, in a style typical of the hyperbole and inaccuracy associated with tributes to Picasso during his lifetime (1881 - 1973). |  | | Again, contrary to Ramie, though he may have claimed to have seen Picasso seated at the potter's wheel, it is highly unlikely Picasso threw his own pots, wisely depending on the expertise of the Madoura staff to create the basic building blocks of his ceramics output: jugs, platters, plates and vases. |
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http://www.artguidenw.com/Picasso.htm
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| | Picasso, Pablo [encyclopedia] |
 | | In 1891, Picasso moved with his family to La Coruña, where he studied fine art formally, as well as with his father, who was an artist and former professor at the School of Arts and Crafts in Malaga. |  | | Picasso traveled between Barcelona and Paris from 1900 to 1904, and afterward lived almost exclusively in Paris, where he was a prominent figure among his contemporaries. |  | | Picasso.s popularity did not cease after this point.in fact, it grew steadily throughout his relatively long life (he died at the age of 92).but his dominance as an artist began to wane. |
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http://www.artzia.com/History/Biography/Picasso
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| | Pablo Picasso, Spanish Painter in France |
 | | For Picasso, the meaning of art was to be derived from other works of art, and not directly from nature. |  | | Their influence, among others', can be detected in the paintings of Picasso's "blue period" (1901-04), which was stimulated by his exposure to life and thought in Paris, where he made his home after 1904. |  | | Also during the 1930s, Picasso accomplished his most important work in sculpture; dating from this period are numerous influential works, including welded pieces composed of found objects, bronzes cast from plaster, and maquettes for monumental outdoor sculptures. |
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http://www.discoverfrance.net/France/Art/Picasso/Picasso.shtml
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| | Pablo Picasso Artist |
 | | Pablo Picasso was born in Malaga, Spain on October 25, 1881. |  | | Picasso's highly original style continuously evolved throughout his long career, expanding the definition of what art could be. |  | | By 1912 Picasso was incorporating newspaper print, postage stamps and other materials into his paintings. |
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http://www.lucidcafe.com/library/95oct/ppicasso.html
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| | Pablo Picasso -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | French photographer and painter who was one of Pablo Picasso's mistresses for eight years in the 1930s and '40s and was the subject of many of his portraits (b. |  | | Spanish sculptor who was among the first artists to work in iron; he introduced Pablo Picasso to metal sculpture. |  | | In Pablo Picasso, a Spaniard who lived most of his life in France, we find the most important painter of the 20th century to date. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9108524
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| | Astrocartography of Pablo Picasso's Least-aspected Sun |
 | | In February 1917, Picasso traveled to Italy with Jean Cocteau to meet with Sergey Diaghilev, the director of the Ballets Russes. |  | | Pablo Ruiz Picasso was born in Malaga, Spain, about eight degrees west of the vertical, midnight position of his Primary Sun. |  | | I suddenly realized how necessary it was for Picasso to have people around who believed in him and his work and [who] could be trusted to follow him wholeheartedly into the future. |
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http://www.dominantstar.com/b_pic.htm
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| | WebMuseum: Picasso and Cubism |
 | | The Spaniard Pablo Picasso and the Frenchman Georges Braque splintered the visual world not wantonly, but sensuously and beautifully with their new art. |  | | The Cubist movement in painting was developed by Picasso and Braque around 1907 and became a major influence on Western art. |  | | It was then that artists such as Picasso and Braque started to use pieces of cut-up newspaper in their paintings. |
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http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/tl/20th/cubism.html
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| | Pablo Picasso Online |
 | | Pablo Picasso at the National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. In-depth study of The Tragedy, 1903 |  | | Pablo Picasso at the National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. 12 works by Pablo Picasso |  | | The Most Influential Artist of the Century, Pablo Picasso: Famous as no artist ever had been, he was a pioneer, a master and a protean monster, with a hand in every art movement of the century, 1998 article by Robert Hughes |
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http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/picasso_pablo.html
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| | CGFA- Pablo Ruiz y Picasso |
 | | Paul as Harlequin, 1924, oil on canvas, Musée Picasso, Paris. |  | | The Lovers, 1923, National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. The Pipes of Pan, 1923, oil on canvas, Musée Picasso, Paris. |  | | First Communion, 1895-96, oil on canvas, Museo Picasso, Barcelona. |
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http://cgfa.sunsite.dk/picasso
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| | Pablo Picasso |
 | | Pablo Ruiz Picasso (1881-1973) was the first child of Jose Ruiz y Blasco... |  | | Cantique des créature: Pablo Picasso pintor, Le (1982).... |  | | Mystère Picasso, Le (1956) (painter: original artwork) (uncredited) |
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http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0681444
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| | Pablo Picasso |
 | | Picasso Pablo: Pablo Picasso, A Retrospective (Abrams, Harry N) Picasso Pablo: Picasso In The Collection Of The Museum Of Modern Art, Including Remainder-Interest And Promised Gifts (Abrams, Harry N) Picasso, Pablo and Louis Aragon. |  | | Picasso, The Blue and Rose Periods: A Catalogue Raisonne of the Paintings, 1900-1906. |  | | Picasso's Paintings, Watercolors, Drawings and Sculpture; A comprehensive Illustrated Catalogue: Cubism to Neoclassicism, 1917-19. |
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http://www.scaruffi.com/art/picasso.html
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| | Amazon.com: Picasso Erotique: Books: Pablo Picasso,Annie Le Brun,Pascal Quignard,Jean-Jacques Lebel,Patrick ... |
 | | At the age of eight, Picasso's first drawings already displayed a precocious interest in the female form, and in the days leading up to his death he was still working obsessively on sketches of the female sex. |  | | Annie Le Brun's "Painting in the Bedroom" successfully places Picasso's erotic sensibilities and drive in context and in comparison to other painters, whom she asserts (and proves) shared traits with Picasso. |  | | Jean Clair, Director of the Muse Picasso in Paris and author of numerous art historical books in French, has gathered 317 color and 143 b&w illustrations covering all periods of Picasso's incessant output, fleshed out with excellent essays by Annie Le Brun, Robert Rosenblum and others. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/3791325612?v=glance
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| | Pablo Picasso - Wikiquote |
 | | But, said Picasso, of course not, I want an old house. |  | | On his "blue" and "rose" periods, from Picasso on Art |  | | It means nothing to me. I have no opinion about it, and I don't care. |
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http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Pablo_Picasso
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| | Everything is real - the fanlisting for Pablo Picasso |
 | | Approved by tfl.org, this fanlisting for the famous artist Pablo Picasso has been up and running since 26th April 2004. |  | | Everything is real - the fanlisting for Pablo Picasso |  | | The title of the fanlisting comes from the following Pablo Picasso quote: Everything you can imagine is real. |
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http://fan.500ml.org/picasso
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| | OCAIW - Pablo Picasso |
 | | Portrait of Paul Picasso as a Child, 1923 |  | | Silhouette of Picasso and Young Girl Crying, 1940 |  | | Sketch of Set for "Le 14 Juillet" by Romain Rolland, 1936 |
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http://www.ocaiw.com/picasso.htm
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| | Pablo Picasso Die Skulpturen |
 | | Auch wenn die Malerei und Grafik von Picasso kunstgeschichtlich, von der Ausstrahlung auf andere Künstler her, bedeutender ist, so würde ich doch behaupten, die Skulpturen sind der eigentliche Höhepunkt von Picassos Schaffen, denn die Erfindungskraft und der Humor sind in seinem plastischen Werk am ausgeprägtesten und offensichtlichsten. |  | | Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris: Katalog von Werner Spiess: Picasso. |  | | September, im August ist die Ausstellung geschlossen, 58 Werke von Pablo Picasso. |
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http://www.cosmopolis.ch/cosmo17/picasso.htm
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| | The New Yorker: Shouts and Murmurs |
 | | E.C.: We talked with her and she said, “Picasso was great to work with. |  | | You would expect her to be aloof and distant, but she wasn’t like that at all. |  | | Pablo, could you just look into the camera and say, “Hi, I’m Pablo Picasso, be sure to watch me on The Entertainment Channel!” |
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http://www.newyorker.com/shouts/content/?031208sh_shouts
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| | Pablo Picasso Quotes |
 | | Inspirational Art Quotes by the famous Spanish Artist Pablo Picasso |  | | born Pablo Ruiz Picasso - Malaga, Spain - 25th of October, 1881 / Died - April 8, 1973 |  | | The problem is how to remain an artist once he grows up." |
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http://www.artquotes.net/masters/picasso_quotes.htm
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| | Pablo Picasso : Le site officiel |
 | | picasso, musee, museum, exposition, exhibition, cubisme, pablo, succession, vie, oeuvres, ruiz, maya, claude, paloma, genealogie, biographie, ateliers, peinture, sculpture, periode, bleue, rose, metamorphoses, neo-classique, vallauris, guernica, vauvenargues, minotaure, agenda, livre, vente, agents, painting, copyright, life, work, book, administration, droits, auteur, reproduction, representation, demande, autorisation, credits |  | | Demandes d'autorisations en ligne pour l'utilisation des oeuvres, de l'image et du nom Picasso. |  | | Sa vie, sa biographie, ses peintures, ses sculptures et ses ateliers. |
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http://www.picasso.fr
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| | Quia - Pablo Picasso |
 | | Search these Internet links to find the answers to these questions about Pablo Picasso and his works. |  | | This activity was created by a Quia Web subscriber. |  | | The floating accent bar in this activity may not work because it requires a newer browser. |
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http://www.quia.com/sh/2662.html
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