Was reminded of Picasso’s pet owl from the recent Jennifer Ackerman podcast I shared with you, so I found some biography quotes about the owl and what a great pet it was(n’t)!

Austin Klein - Picasso’s Owl

Some bits from this article:

I’ve been delighted to discover the story of Pablo Picasso’s owl, as told in Françoise Gilot’s wonderful memoir, Life With Picasso:

Pablo loved to surround himself with birds and animals. In general they were exempt from the suspicion with which he regarded his other friends. While Pablo was still working at the Musée d’Antibes, [Michel] Sima had come to us one day with a little owl he had found in a corner of the museum. One of his claws had been injured. We bandaged it and gradually it healed. We bought a cage for him and when we returned to Paris we brought him back with us and put him in the kitchen with the canaries, the pigeons, and the turtledoves.

She describes the owl’s behavior:

We were very nice to him but he only glared at us. Any time we went into the kitchen, the canaries chirped, the pigeons cooed and the turtledoves laughed but the owl remained stolidly silent or, at best, snorted. He smelled awful and ate nothing but mice. Since Pablo’s atelier was overrun with them, I set several traps. Whenever I caught one, I brought it to the owl. As long as I was in the kitchen he ignored the mouse and me. He saw perfectly well in the daytime, of course, in spite of the popular legend about owls, but he apparently preferred to remain aloof. As soon as I left the kitchen, even if only for a minute, the mouse disappeared. The only trace would be a little ball of hair which the owl would regurgitate.

She then describes Picasso’s weird friendship with the owl:

Every time the owl snorted at Pablo he would shout, “Cochon, Merde,” and a few other obscenities, just to show the owl that he was even worse mannered than he was. He used to stick his fingers between the bars of the cage and the owl would bite him, but Pablo’s fingers, though small, were tough and the owl didn’t hurt him. Finally the owl would let him scratch his head and gradually he came to perch on his finger instead of biting it, but even so, he still looked very unhappy. Pablo did a number of drawings and paintings of him and several lithographs as well.

Google says “cochon” means “pig” and “merde” means “shit” for the rest of you wondering.

I’ve added some of the art from the article, but there really was quite a bit of owl art he did. Would you have any of the art below in your home, or I encourage you to Google “Picasso Owl” and share your favorite with us!

  • Kowowow
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    7 months ago

    I do love the way he treated people asking about the meaning of his paintings if somehow I ever become an author I’d do the same thing especially if a heared a kid had to do a book report on something I made

    • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      8
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      7 months ago

      Lol, this is new to me also. I googled it and the first thing to come up was this, which I thought was very nice and he might not be all bad:

      Once, Picasso was asked what his paintings meant. He said, “Do you ever know what the birds are singing? You don’t. But you listen to them anyway.” So, sometimes with art, it is important just to look. -Marina Abramović

      But then every following result was this:

      As historian Arthur I. Miller (not the playwright) details in his book, Einstein, Picasso: Space, Time And The Beauty That Causes Havoc, Picasso carried a revolver, filled with blanks. Miller explains, “He would fire at admirers inquiring about the meaning of his paintings, his theory of aesthetics, … disposing of bourgeois boors, morons and philistines.”

      People were something back in the day, that’s for damn sure… 😧