5. ‘Guernica’ (1937) by Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
Pablo Picasso, Guernica, 1937, oil on canvas, 349 cm × 776 cm, Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid
Pablo Picasso, Guernica
by LYNN ROBINSON
What would be the best way today to protest against a war? How could you influence the largest number of people? In 1937, Picasso expressed his outrage against war with Guernica, his enormous mural-sized painting displayed to millions of visitors at the Paris World’s Fair. It has since become the twentieth century’s most powerful indictment against war, a painting that still feels intensely relevant today.
Much of the painting’s emotional power comes from its overwhelming size, approximately eleven feet tall and twenty five feet wide. Guernica is not a painting you observe with spatial detachment; it feels like it wraps around you, immerses you in its larger-than-life figures and action. And although the size and multiple figures reference the long tradition of European history paintings, this painting is different because it challenges rather than accepts the notion of war as heroic. So why did Picasso paint it?
Postcard of the International Exposition, Paris, 1937 (from a series of 20 detachable cards, edited by H. Chipault)
In 1936, Picasso (who was Spanish) was asked by the newly elected Spanish Republican government to paint an artwork for the Spanish Pavilion at the 1937 Paris World’s Fair. The official theme of the Exposition was a celebration of modern technology. Yet Picasso painted an overtly political painting, a subject in which he had shown little interest up to that time. What had happened to inspire it?
Guernica in ruins, 1937, photograph (German Federal Archives, bild 183-H25224)
Crimes against humanity: an act of war
In 1936, a civil war began in Spain between the
democratic Republican government and fascist forces, led by General Francisco
Franco, attempting to overthrow them. Picasso’s painting is based on the events
of April 27, 1937, when Hitler’s powerful German air force, acting in support
of Franco, bombed the village of Guernica in northern Spain, a city of no
strategic military value. It was history’s first aerial saturation bombing of a
civilian population. It was a cold-blooded training mission designed to test a
new bombing tactic to intimidate and terrorize the resistance. For over three
hours, twenty five bombers dropped 100,000 pounds of explosive and incendiary
bombs on the village, reducing it to rubble. Twenty more fighter planes strafed
and killed defenseless civilians trying to flee. The devastation was appalling:
fires burned for three days, and seventy percent of the city was destroyed. A
third of the population, 1600 civilians, were wounded or killed.
Picasso hears the news
On May 1, 1937, news of the atrocity reached
Paris. Eyewitness reports filled the front pages of local and international
newspapers. Picasso, sympathetic to the Republican government of his homeland,
was horrified by the reports of devastation and death. Guernica is his visual
response, his memorial to the brutal massacre. After hundreds of sketches, the
painting was done in less than a month and then delivered to the Fair’s Spanish
Pavilion, where it became the central attraction. Accompanying it were
documentary films, newsreels and graphic photographs of fascist brutalities in
the civil war. Rather than the typical celebration of technology people
expected to see at a world’s fair, the entire Spanish Pavilion shocked the
world into confronting the suffering of the Spanish people.
Later, in the 1940s, when Paris was occupied by the Germans, a Nazi officer visited Picasso’s studio. “Did you do that?” he is said to have asked Picasso while standing in front of a photograph of the painting. “No,” Picasso replied, “you did.”
World traveler
When the fair ended, the Spanish Republican forces
sent Guernica on an international tour to create awareness of the war and raise
funds for Spanish refugees. It traveled the world for 19 years and then was
loaned for safekeeping to The Museum of Modern Art in New York. Picasso refused
to allow it to return to Spain until the country “enjoyed public liberties and
democratic institutions,” which finally occurred in 1981. Today the painting
permanently resides in the Reina Sofia, Spain’s national museum of modern art
in Madrid.
What can we see
This painting is not easy to decipher. Everywhere
there seems to be death and dying. As our eyes adjust to the frenetic action,
figures begin to emerge. On the far left is a woman, head back, screaming in
pain and grief, holding the lifeless body of her dead child. This is one of the
most devastating and unforgettable images in the painting. To her right is the
head and partial body of a large white bull, the only unharmed and calm figure
amidst the chaos. Beneath her, a dead or wounded man with a severed arm and
mutilated hand clutches a broken sword. Only his head and arms are visible; the
rest of his body is obscured by the overlapping and scattered parts of other
figures. In the center stands a terrified horse, mouth open screaming in pain,
its side pierced by a spear. On the right are three more women. One rushes in,
looking up at the stark light bulb at the top of the scene. Another leans out
of the window of a burning house, her long extended arm holding a lamp, while
the third woman appears trapped in the burning building, screaming in fear and
horror. All their faces are distorted in agony. Eyes are dislocated, mouths are
open, tongues are shaped like daggers.
Color
Picasso chose to paint Guernica in a stark monochromatic
palette of gray, black and white. This may reflect his initial encounter with
the original newspaper reports and photographs in black and white; or perhaps
it suggested to Picasso the objective factuality of an eye witness report. A
documentary quality is further emphasized by the textured pattern in the center
of the painting that creates the illusion of newsprint. The sharp alternation
of black and white contrasts across the painting surface also creates dramatic
intensity, a visual kinetic energy of jagged movement.
Visual complexity
On first glance, Guernica’s composition appears
confusing and chaotic; the viewer is thrown into the midst of intensely violent
action. Everything seems to be in flux. The space is compressed and ambiguous
with the shifting perspectives and multiple viewpoints characteristic of
Picasso’s earlier Cubist style. Images overlap and intersect, obscuring forms
and making it hard to distinguish their boundaries. Bodies are distorted and
semi-abstracted, the forms discontinuous and fragmentary. Everything seems
jumbled together, while sharp angular lines seem to pierce and splinter the
dismembered bodies. However, there is in fact an overriding visual order.
Picasso balances the composition by organizing the figures into three vertical
groupings moving left to right, while the center figures are stabilized within
a large triangle of light.
Symbolism
There has been almost endless debate about the
meaning of the images in Guernica. Questioned about its possible symbolism,
Picasso said it was simply an appeal to people about massacred people and
animals. ”In the panel on which I am working, which I call Guernica, I clearly
express my abhorrence of the military caste which has sunk Spain into an ocean
of pain and death.” The horse and bull are images Picasso used his entire
career, part of the life and death ritual of the Spanish bullfights he first
saw as a child. Some scholars interpret the horse and bull as representing the
deadly battle between the Republican fighters (horse) and Franco’s fascist army
(bull). Picasso said only that the bull represented brutality and darkness, adding
“It isn’t up to the painter to define the symbols. Otherwise it would be better
if he wrote them out in so many words. The public who look at the picture must
interpret the symbols as they understand them.”
In the end, the painting does not appear to have one exclusive meaning. Perhaps it is that very ambiguity, the lack of historical specificity, or the fact that brutal wars continue to be fought, that keeps Guernica as timeless and universally relatable today as it was in 1937.
Lynn Robinson, ‘Pablo Picasso, Guernica’, in Smarthistory, August 9, 2015, accessed August 17, 2022, https://smarthistory.org/picasso-guernica



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