Flattening Space
Rosalind Krauss: Parsing Picasso, 1 April 2004
Picasso and the Invention of Cubism
by Pepe Karmel.
Yale, 233 pp., £40, October 2003,0 300 09436 1 Show More
by Pepe Karmel.
Yale, 233 pp., £40, October 2003,
“... It has become conventional to ask of Picasso’s early work how he came to invent Cubism, the style fundamental to the course of 20th-century aesthetics. Its influence can be seen in abstraction (Mondrian’s gridded panels), Surrealism and Expressionism; in the readymade and in Dada’s exploitation of industrial raw materials (John Heartfield’s political photomontages would have been impossible without collage); and even Abstract Expressionism (as Clement Greenberg argued, the little pockets of ‘depth’ that pucker the surfaces of Cubist paintings presage the hills and crannies in paintings by de Kooning and Pollock ... ”