Earthshaking
Two momentous events occurred in 1906 — San Francisco was ripped apart by
an earthquake and Pablo Picasso “discovered” photography. The former
event, of course, has entered the history books; the latter, however, has
been treated hitherto as a mere footnote to a great painter’s development
as an iconic artist.
No more. A box camera that once belonged to Picasso has been unearthed
with a roll of undeveloped film still inside. The resulting photographs —
intriguing images made jagged and more forceful by the accidental marring
of the lens by the camera’s previous owner — now lend a sharper clarity to
that period when Picasso was still coming to terms with the then
revolutionary discipline of cubism.
The Museum of New Art is greeting the New Year with an entire show
devoted to Picasso’s Camera and I’ll be hard put to think of any
forthcoming exhibit that will be able to top it.
PLEASE check it out before Feb. 25.
Turn to detroitmona.com or call
248.210.7560.
MONA is located at 7 N. Saginaw in Pontiac.