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...Pablo Picasso, sculpture has always been a kind of three-dimensional doodling, a device to work out ideas he intends to enshrine in oil. He keeps his numerous constructions of found objects, sheet-metal cutouts, bronzes and wooden figures at his home near Cannes. Occasionally, his black eyes dancing, he will show off his motley assembly of talismans, to test the mettle of his visitors. But he rarely sells them-at most one piece...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sculpture: Doodles of Genius | 10/20/1967 | See Source »

...Tadeus Kantor shows that the Iron Curtain has long since popped wide open with his portrait collage of a stuffed shirt (with shirt). France's Baldaccini Cesar took another of the ten minor prizes with his sculptures of Mobil Oil cans and plastic. He disdained it, snorting "Ask Pablo [Picasso], or Sartre, or Fidel Castro. They will tell you whether I should be insulted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Exhibitions: Shape for the Future | 9/29/1967 | See Source »

...which "you can have your teacher mailed to you." When EVR is perfected, he says, master teachers will "communicate with kids with the same intensity as Mickey Mouse does now," while housewives replay souffles step by step with Julia Child and amateur cellists (like Goldmark himself) play duets with Pablo Casals...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Your Own ETV Station | 9/8/1967 | See Source »

Right up to the moment that the billowing blue percale veil covering Pablo Picasso's 50-ft. sculpture came tumbling down last week in Chicago, the debate continued. Was it a bird, a woman, an Afghan hound, a Barbary ape, a cruel hoax, a Communist plot, or Superman? Alderman John J. Hoellen introduced a resolution in the city council to replace the work with a statue of Chicago Cubs First Baseman Ernie Banks. And Alderman Thomas Rosenberg countered with a proposal to send a statue of Alderman Hoellen to Paris' redlit Pigalle. Mused the Chicago Sun-Times: "Picasso...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sculpture: An Old Maestro's Magic | 8/25/1967 | See Source »

...Pablo Picasso should have stuck to painting. Back in 1941, he wrote a play called Le Desir Attrape par la Queue (Desire Caught by the Tail). It was a jumble of absurdist fantasies, peo pled with characters named Big Foot, Fat Anxiety, Thin Anguish, Round End and Onion. There was no plot - just a splattering stream of Freudian chaos, a surrealistic carnival revue dwelling on food, money and sex. Le Desir was per formed twice, by experimental theaters in Manhattan and Vienna; shortly after the play was written, a cast headed by Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir gave...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater Abroad: Desire Under the Tent | 7/28/1967 | See Source »

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