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A Picasso Show From Pablo's Daughter
A Picasso Show From Pablo's Daughter

New York Times

time22-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

A Picasso Show From Pablo's Daughter

Paloma Picasso, the youngest of Pablo Picasso's four children, vividly remembers sitting on the floor of her father's studio, drawing on paper as he worked at his easel. 'Because I was a very quiet little girl, I was able to stay with him,' she said in a recent interview. 'He would let me stay next to him while he was painting because I could spend hours without uttering a word. 'I knew we were not supposed to touch anything,' she added. 'He would always say, 'You can touch with your eyes, but not with your hand.'' Now Ms. Picasso has helped organize a show of her father's work at Gagosian gallery, which opened on April 18. Some of the pieces in the exhibition have been in her possession and have never been seen by the public. 'The idea was to do a show where it wouldn't be chronological,' she said. 'It would be more the different works talking to each other.' The show, 'Picasso: Tête-à-tête,' is an unusual role for Ms. Picasso, given that for the last 45 years she has focused on her jewelry collection for Tiffany & Company. About two years ago she took over the stewardship of her father's estate, after the death of her brother Claude Ruiz-Picasso (Ruiz was the name of Picasso's paternal grandfather). The Picasso Administration manages copyright issues and licensing deals. . On a recent afternoon at 980 Madison Avenue — the show is Gagosian's last in that building because it has been leased to other tenants — Ms. Picasso walked through the gallery as her father's work was being installed. Among the highlights she pointed out was 'Femme au Vase de Houx (Marie-Thérèse),' an oil and charcoal on canvas from 1937, which she used to keep in New York and then in Switzerland, where she now lives. She also paused before 'Nu drappe, assis dans un fauteuil,' a 1923 oil painting of Picasso's first wife, the Russian ballerina Olga Khokhlova, nude and sitting in an armchair, that at first looks like a simple line drawing but that Ms. Picasso said is actually very layered. 'It's a very touching, moving portrait,' she said. 'You can see that it's a real person who's there.' The exhibition includes six drawings, 24 sculptures and 38 paintings. They date from throughout the artist's career, 1896 to 1972, and showcase Picasso's expansive range. (She refers to her father as 'Pablo.') 'Some of them are really special, beautiful examples of various periods — from an incredible self-portrait to a later Marie-Thérèse,' said Larry Gagosian, referring to Picasso's muse and mistress. 'It's very exciting to show works by arguably the most famous artist that's ever lived that haven't been seen.' Only a few pieces are for sale — prices are not publicly disclosed — and Ms. Picasso said she aimed to show the many attributes of her father through the artworks. 'They can be both very soft and strong at the same time,' she said. 'It's all of the things that make Picasso who he is. I think we are really doing him justice here.' Elegant and regal at 76, Ms. Picasso radiates deep affection and respect for her father, though she said she is well aware of the flaws that complicated his relationship to her mother, Françoise Gilot, a French painter 40 years his junior, who died in 2023. 'He was difficult at times, and I could see it with my own eyes,' she said. 'Most people don't behave well all the time. Why should we expect him to be perfect?' Ms. Picasso and her brother Claude were the children of the couple; Gilot left the artist in 1953, and angered him with her 1964 memoir, 'Life With Picasso,' in which she described his abuse, including an occasion when he held a lit cigarette against her cheek. Pablo Picasso severed contact with both Claude and Paloma after the book's publication, and never contacted them again, which Ms. Picasso has described as painful. 'When my mother wrote the book, she wanted to make him less of a god and more of a man,' Ms. Picasso said in the gallery interview. 'And it doesn't make him less great where he's great. He's the greatest. But he can also have weaknesses. And that's OK. 'Even though you can criticize him,' she continued, 'that doesn't make his work irrelevant.' Despite her father's reputation for mistreating women, Ms. Picasso has insisted that he was a man of his time and that some of the accusations are exaggerated. 'My father didn't only have relationships with very young girls," she told the Spanish newspaper La Vanguardia last year. 'He was 40 years older than my mother, but she was not a girl at all. I don't think he was a man who abused women or thought they were inferior to men.' The presence of Ms. Picasso herself permeates the Gagosian exhibition — in a portrait of her holding a doll, which has her face; in the wooden dolls that her father made for her. There are also black-and-white family photographs, including one of Ms. Picasso in a short black bob and flip-flops, perched on a stool next to her father and their dog. 'This is the dining room,' she said. 'We would be having lunch and then — the minute lunch was finished — he would push everything and just start working right there.' Because her mother was also an artist, 'the painting and the living were completely intermixed,' Ms. Picasso added. 'It was one world.' Young Paloma was shy and didn't always love having her father stopped on the street for autographs. But then she had something of an epiphany upon realizing that she would want to meet the daughter of Charlie Chaplin. 'I thought, 'Well, if I want to meet Geraldine Chaplin,' she said, 'I should not be upset when people want to meet me because I'm the daughter of Picasso.'' She was 24 when her father died in 1973, and felt in part responsible for preserving, protecting and promoting his legacy. 'When you are the daughter of somebody that famous — and for such good reasons — you have this sense that you have to share with the rest of the world,' she said. She and Claude entered a legal fight that in 1974 established them as legitimate heirs. And in 1989, after years of squabbling among all Picasso's heirs including his widow, Jacqueline Roque, over the distribution of the thousands of artworks he left behind and commercial rights to his name, a French court appointed Claude as the estate's administrator. Claude sometimes clashed with his half sibling Maya Ruiz-Picasso, the daughter of the French model Marie-Thérèse Walter, over how to run the administration. The estate's proceeds are now divided among all of Pablo's descendants. (Maya died in 2022 at 87; Paloma and Claude's other half sibling, Paulo — Picasso's son with the dancer Olga Khokhlova — died at 54 in 1975.) Ms. Picasso said her brother Claude, with whom she described herself as close, did 'a fabulous job at the Picasso administration.' As head of the administration herself now, Ms. Picasso said she is trying to incorporate her family members. 'The nephews and nieces, they've all grown up. And they wanted for it to be more collegial,' she said. 'I'm at the head of it, but I do report to them much more than Claude had to, and when I make a decision, I take their point of view in much more.' Having established an independently successful career as a designer, Ms. Picasso said she feels ready to take on a greater role in the estate. 'I made every effort for my work not to be connected to my father, which is why now I can do it,' she said. 'I've proven to myself that I can exist on my own merits. I think I had to prove to myself that I could be worth something on my own.'

What's Trending: St. Patrick's Day, Lent, Florida man
What's Trending: St. Patrick's Day, Lent, Florida man

Yahoo

time07-03-2025

  • Lifestyle
  • Yahoo

What's Trending: St. Patrick's Day, Lent, Florida man

SAVANNAH, Ga. (WSAV) — From a St. Patrick's Day tradition to a Florida Man's creative theft, observation and ingestion are the threads connecting this week's biggest trending stories. First up, St. Patrick's Day is coming up and that means the greening of the Forsyth Park Fountain. How did this tradition get started? Next, with Lent beginning on Ash Wednesday, we've put together a list of fish fries in the Coastal Empire and Lowcountry. Finally, an Orlando man's jewel swipe led to a deep, dark place for some $750,000 Tiffany & Company earrings. Catch up on trending topics each week by tuning in to News 3 at 4:00 p.m. on weekdays or visit Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

At Tiffany, Its Watch Director Shapes the Story
At Tiffany, Its Watch Director Shapes the Story

New York Times

time12-02-2025

  • Business
  • New York Times

At Tiffany, Its Watch Director Shapes the Story

Tiffany & Company, the jewelry house of Holly Golightly and Beyoncé alike, made its debut last month at LVMH Watch Week, the luxury group's annual presentation of new watches, held this year in New York and Paris. Its appearance alongside the likes of TAG Heuer, Zenith, Hublot and Bulgari was just the latest in Tiffany's efforts to expand its profile in contemporary watchmaking since LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton bought the house for almost $16 billion in 2021. The Watch Week debut was a 'significant milestone,' Anthony Ledru, the chief executive, wrote in an email, that 'not only allows us to share our rich history of inventiveness in the world of horology but also to showcase our vision for the future of Tiffany watches. At Tiffany, every watch tells a story.' And the man behind those stories is Nicolas Beau, the vice president of Tiffany Horlogerie, the jeweler's watchmaking arm that now employs 50 people at its Geneva headquarters. Mr. Beau joined the house in 2021 after spending nearly 20 years in watches and jewelry at Chanel and earlier stints at Cartier and Baume & Mercier, both owned by Richemont. In a video interview from Geneva before the Watch Week presentations, Mr. Beau said that, when he was considering the move to Tiffany, he had been 'extremely surprised' to learn of its long and rich watchmaking past, including the establishment of a factory in Geneva in 1874. 'It had been leading the way in the late 1800s and early 1900s to a point that you'd expect from mostly Swiss, British or even French companies at that time,' he said. 'That very strong heritage and past is a chance for the future.' Five jewelry watches were introduced at the Watch Week presentations, two of which were inspired by the famous Bird on a Rock brooch first created by Jean Schlumberger in 1965. (The bird has become something of a touchstone for Tiffany recently, even appearing in festive lights on the flagship Fifth Avenue store in December.) Jewelry watches, Mr. Beau said, are one of the three categories that now make up the horology division's streamlined offerings. The others are a classic collection, which includes the Atlas watch line, introduced in 1983 and inspired by the New York store's signature Atlas clock; and a playful line of table clocks called Time Objects, referencing Tiffany's clock making heritage but in the shapes of planes, sports cars and New York's signature yellow taxis. As part of the change, he said, some watch models will be discontinued, including the 1940s style East West design, which has a horizontal dial, and the oval Cocktail collection. During the interview, which has been edited and condensed, Mr. Beau talked about his strategy for Tiffany watches, where the industry is going and the differences between fathers and sons. What does the LVMH Watch Week debut mean to you, as a watchmaker? It's obviously very important. The reason we haven't been there until now is just because we were not ready. The company was acquired nearly four-and-a-half years ago and our strategy was to go back to our roots — the roots of which are in Geneva. To showcase that change, it was important to give ourselves a little time. What is the strategy for the watch division? Because we are a jeweler, when it comes to creation, we have a design-first philosophy. And within that philosophy, we are creating watches that are related to that history and jeweler's DNA, and obviously incorporating some serious elements of watchmaking. Being a jeweler is a bit different from being a pure watchmaker. It's about always trying to find this right balance between being a jeweler and watchmaker — it's a subtle balance. Tiffany still is mainly known as a jeweler. What are the challenges in positioning it as a watchmaker? The challenge is to make the public know about our rich history and heritage. Traveling in New York, I find that people know, as well as those in some key cities in the U.S. where Tiffany was so strong for so many years. In the rest of the world, it is sometimes totally unknown for watches. We need to combine this focus on the past and build the future. The company is evolving very fast, transforming in many directions, and we are within that transformation. I like to call it 'back to the future.' What is your outlook for the watch industry right now? When I look at the market today, I find two very interesting things. There are two types of companies which are successful — or staying pretty successful — in a time that's not great economically. You have very traditional watchmakers, most of which are independent. They can be big and part of a group. But they can also be very small. And there are jewelers. When you look at the great jewelers, they all are doing pretty well today — and we are doing pretty well, too. I think there is this search for very authentic, traditional watches incarnated by those independent brands. And a search for very jewelry-related timepieces. One of the new jewelry watches from LVMH Watch Week was the Eternity by Tiffany Wisteria, part of a collection that features diamond hour markers in different cuts, from princess to heart shape. The floral motif dial recalls the famous Wisteria lamp created by Tiffany Studios in the early 20th century. What does the design represent? When I was talking about the connection between the art of watchmaking, the art of jewelry and Tiffany's various histories and DNA, here you have a watch that is inspired by the Tiffany lamps and all the work on the diamonds with the 12 different cuts. And with a LTM mechanical movement. You'll also find the crown set with a diamond in the six-prong Tiffany Setting. This watch illustrates what I am trying to evoke. How did you get into watches? My father was an electrical engineer, a pure engineer, and the only thing he was interested in was technique. Ever since I was young he was always bringing me electronic watches, mostly from Japan at the time, and being so proud that they could measure temperature, the altitude, the weather. But this was not speaking to me. Years later, when I was working in watchmaking, I bought him his first luxury watch for his birthday. It was only telling the time and had to be rewound every 24 hours. I remember his face, thinking 'What is this?' He thought I was crazy. It was more a culture shock for my father, who was so much about technology, while I was much more about art and hand craftsmanship. That's why I went into watchmaking actually — I'm so passionate about hand crafting, even a piece of furniture — and I think it was also about wanting to go in a different direction than your parents.

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