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The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
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Established in 1996 |
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Wednesday, June 18, 2025 |
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Prove That Pablo Picasso Wanted to Be French |
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PARIS, FRANCE.- A document has come to light that proves that Pablo Picasso wanted to have the French nationality, something he always denied. On April 3, 1940, Pablo Picasso applied to become a French citizen, but the application was denied because of his political activities. Picasso had been an anarchist in his youth and later a communist. Picasso also kept most of his money out of France. Pierre Daix and Armand Israel, two historians and specialists on Picasso and Braque are just about to publish a book with this information. The French weekly L´Express published a summary of the French police information on Picasso. The file had been taken first by the Nazis and later by the Russians. The KGB gave the files back to France in 2000. A very important document in this file is the application for the French citizenship by Pablo Picasso in 1940. The German army was about to go into France on May 10. An anonymous inspector concludes on the matter: "The sum of all the information on the subject (Pablo Picaso) tells us that he does not qualify for the French citizenship he requests".
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Today's News
June 18, 2025
Contemporary Japanese art returns to Highfield Hall & Gardens this summer
New exhibition of works by Dusti Bongé opens at the Walter Anderson Museum of Art
Miller & Miller announces results of Automobiles, Motorbikes & Advertising auction
Bowman Sculpture marks 30-year collaboration with Hanneke Beaumont in major retrospective
Frick debuts new special exhibition galleries with major Vermeer loans
Antonio Seguí's private collection of African, Oceanic, and American art to be auctioned in Paris
RM Sotheby's to auction Jeremy Clarkson's Ferrari at Cliveden
Tiny fossils tell big story: New study unlocks ancient climate secrets in Mexico
"Radical!": New exhibition reclaims women artists' place in modernist art history
Japanese woodblock prints featuring women in the Edo Period on display at Plains Art Museum
Scream Machines-Art Ghost Train at Museum Tinguely, Basel
Anne Appleby's "Array" unveils nature's cycles through meditative color fields
With glowing hearts, AGO welcomes home the joyful art and radical patriotism of Joyce Wieland
Fridman Gallery presents Mad Heart, Be Brave, a group exhibition curated by Sadaf Padder
Arne Quinze's Raw Paradise Debuts at König Bergson
First US female astronaut's estate Collection to be auctioned
Ayyam Gallery presents "Wavering Hope," a collective reflection on the Syrian experience
Ayana Ross named 40th Duncanson Artist-in-Residence
Francis Offman's "Weaving Stories" transforms trauma into tactile art at Vienna's Secession
First overview exhibition: 'Artus Quellinus, Sculptor of Amsterdam' in the Royal Palace Amsterdam
National Gallery of Canada receives 22.8-million CAD gift of contemporary artworks
Independent announces a new and expanded venue, dates, and creative team
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