Picasso - Art as a Political Weapon
April 10, 2015Pablo Picasso didn’t just see paintings in terms of pure visual pleasure. Art for him was also a political weapon. By 1937, the Spanish painter and co-founder of Cubism had been living in Paris for more than 30 years but he was still deeply troubled by the civil war in his homeland. On April 26, 1937, German bombers from the clandestine Condor Legion attacked the town of Guernica, reducing it to rubble with more than 1600 people dead and 800 wounded.
For Picasso, Painting was “Seeing”
Picasso was horrified and outraged, and his immediate reaction was to grab his brushes: His painting "Guernica” took a clear stand on the side of the Spanish Republic and against Franco’s fascists and the Nazis’ unofficial involvement in the war. For Picasso, painting was “seeing” – and he saw his century as being better than any other, which is why his anguish over the destruction of a small Spanish town inspired what was without doubt the most impressive and moving of all his more than 8,000 works. This documentary focuses on Picasso as both an artist and a political activist.
Broadcasting Hours:
DW
SUN 19.04.2015 – 22:15 UTC
MON 20.04.2015 – 06:15 UTC
MON 20.04.2015 – 13:15 UTC
MON 20.04.2015 – 17:15 UTC
TUE 21.04.2015 – 04:15 UTC
TUE 21.04.2015 – 10:15 UTC
Cape Town UTC +2 | Delhi UTC +5,5 | Hong Kong UTC +8
San Francisco UTC -7 | Edmonton UTC -6 | New York UTC -4
DW (Europe)
MON 20.04.2015 – 04:15 UTC
MON 20.04.2015 – 17:15 UTC
TUE 21.04.2015 – 06:15 UTC
TUE 21.04.2015 – 13:15 UTC
London UTC +1 | Berlin UTC +2 | Moscow UTC +3
DW (Arabia)
MON 20.04.2015 – 04:15 UTC
Tunis UTC +1 | Cairo UTC + 2 | Dubai UTC +4
DW (Amerika)
MON 20.04.2015 – 06:15 UTC
Vancouver UTC -7 | New York UTC -4 | Sao Paulo UTC -3