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  1. On February 4, 1921, Olga Picasso gave birth to a son who would be named Paul ( Paulo). At first Picasso was delighted to have a son. Paintings and drawings of the baby in his mother’s arms testify to paternal pride and love. However, Olga became an obsessively overprotective parent, and, according to the biographer John Richardson, got into ...

  2. 20 de nov. de 2018 · Pablo Picasso and Olga Khokhlova met in Rome in 1917 when her ballet company was rehearsing “Parade,” one of Sergei Diaghilev’s “Ballets Russes.”. In 1918 they wed in an Orthodox church in Paris. Olga Khokhlova became the artist’s first official wife and the main model for the new “classicism” period of Picasso’s artistic career.

  3. Russian Female Dancers. Russian Ballet Dancers. Childhood & Early Life. Olga Stepanovna Khokhlova was born on June 17, 1891, in Nezhin, Chernihiv Oblast (province) of northern Ukraine, which was then part of the Russian Empire. Her mother, Lydia Zinchenko, was Ukrainian, while her father was a Russian officer. She had three brothers and a sister.

  4. 17 de may. de 2024 · On 4 February 1921, Khokhlova gave birth to a boy Paul Joseph Picasso usually known as 'Paulo'. [6] From then on, Khokhlova and Picasso's relationship deteriorated. Picasso was proud of Khokhlova and his son, but she became obsessively protective of the boy. She enjoyed the prestige of being Picasso's wife and the idea of a celebrity lifestyle.

  5. 20 de jun. de 2019 · Pablo Picasso (1881-1973), 'Olga Khokhlova con mantilla', Barcelona, ... También en Paulo vestido de arlequín, fiel reflejo de una paternidad que unió a los dos esposos, ...

  6. In 1917, ballerina Olga Khokhlova performed Las Meninas, Les Sylphides and The Firebird with Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in Barcelona. In 1918 she married Picasso and in 1921 gave birth to her only child, Paulo. Picasso experimented with different approaches to discover the right image for her in his paintings and drawings.

  7. 3 de sept. de 2017 · The spouses finally separate for good in 1935, a year the artist temporarily stops creating paintings, but stay married until Olga’s death in 1955. Scheduled for spring 2017 at the National Picasso Museum in Paris, the exposition revisits these shared years. It attempts to understand the execution of Picasso’s major artworks by recreating ...