Picasso’s Primitivism, joined to the influence of Cézanne’s Large Bathers, culminated in 1907 in the enigmatic and famous picture Les Demoiselles d’Avignon. Those who saw it were astonished and perplexed, not only by the arbitrary disruption in the right-hand part of the picture of the continuity that had always united an image but also by the defiant unloveliness, which made it plain that the traditional beauties of art, the appeal of the subject, and the credibility of its imitation were now, at any rate to Picasso, finally irrelevant. “What a loss to French art!” a Russian collector said, and Picasso ...(100 of 73439 words)