Blog Post #3

                                        "Guernica"(1937)

                                                                  By: Pablo Picasso


The anti-war message that is being portrayed in Picassos' Guernica (1937) portrays the horror of what may have been going on at that time. I feel a sort of such frustration because of all the things going on in this painting. Clearly that already being one of Picassos' points. The way the geometric figures portray the cries out for help for these people during the war. As well as the personal connections the artist might have made himself. He really does use the shapes to demonstrate that they speak for themselves without any true motion at all.

This is a very effective anti-war message because at first glanced it may have been something to have bothered and or caused an audience to feel uncomfortable. I mean from the people, to the animals, and then to the tiniest detail. Symbolism is the loudest thing from this painting and really, it speaks for itself. It proves as one of many things Picasso is getting across of it just being, ‘it is what it is.’ As he then said, "The public must interpret the symbols as they see them."

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