Narrative art tells us a story, and although a narrative is generally categorised as fiction, which is based on imaginative stories that did not actually happen, some nonfiction can in fact tell a story and can therefore be classed as narrative. Many visual narratives depend on the time period and the context in which they were created. Painters and sculptors aimed to produce pieces that can tell an entire story in one simple glance. Narrative art can feature both history and genre painting. Some artists still exhibit important historical events in their work. This can evoke emotions in the audience and often encourage viewers to learn more about history. Incorporating historical events into their work allows artists to effectively inform, …show more content…
He started as a child prodigy and ended up being acknowledged as the greatest and most well-known but least understood artist of his century. Picasso showed that he had profoundly grasped naturalistic conventions – the way an artist makes a picture look realistic – at a very young age after some training with his father, who was a small-town drawing teacher. In the late years of his adolescence, Picasso moved to Paris where he found like-minded poets and painters. Here, his work started to attract critical attention and praise before he had even reached twenty. Picasso’s first body of work, dating around 1901 is classified as his ‘Blue Period’. He painted images of clowns, beggars and prostitutes, all in tones of …show more content…
It brought with it Cubism, a new style of art that Picasso developed in collaboration with another painter, Georges Braque. Picasso continued to study and created experiments in the art around him. While vacationing in the Catalan village in 1906, Picasso began carving wooden sculptures. In these works, Picasso was driven to a simplification of form than he previously knew. This experience in wood-carving led to extreme changes in his other work as he stopped painting what he saw and started painting what he thought. At the beginning of 1907, Picasso began the painting “Les Demoiselles d’Avignon” which translates to “The Young Women of Avignon”. The painting started out as a narrative brothel scene, with five prostitutes and two men- a medical student and a sailor. However, the painting changed as it progressed. Picasso painted over the two men, or the clients and left the five women to gaze out at the viewer. Les Demoiselles d’Avignon was initially deemed immoral as it was seen as scandalous at the