I know this site generally has an ambivalent-to-negative view of Picasso (for plenty of good reasons), but I had no idea he made an antiwar painting that referenced american atrocities in Korea. Just another example of how that conflict has been forcibly memory-holed in this hemisphere.

Here's an excerpt from the Picasso museum regarding the work's reception:

Picasso takes sides with the innocent in the painting, as he had done in the Guernica during the Civil War, but the work did not please anyone at the time. It upset the leaders of the French Communist Party, of whom Picasso was a militant, who considered the aesthetics of the painting too far removed from socialist realism. And obviously because of its theme, it came as a complete shock in sectors of international criticism, close to American museums like the MOMA in New York. “Although nobody likes it, it is something, isn’t it?”, said Picasso.

  • piaoliang [none/use name]
    ·
    2 years ago

    I thought that was a common mode of fiction back then, the fear of being invaded by Europeans and becoming an overtaxed province of a distant empire. It's what powered the Brexit movement.