
Commemoration of Pablo Picasso
On this day, April 8, 1973, the art world lost one of its greatest revolutionaries: Pablo Picasso.
Born in Málaga, Picasso lived every stage of his life intensely through art. Painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist, and poet: his work spanned multiple disciplines and over 20,000 pieces that narrate a life devoted to the relentless search for new forms of expression.
He was the father of Cubism, alongside Georges Braque—a movement that broke away from traditional perspective and fragmented the world to reassemble it from impossible angles. But Picasso was more than Cubism: he was the Blue Period, the Rose Period, the political commitment of works like *Guernica*, playfulness, pain, satire, and desire.
At Todo Cuadros, we recognize art as a way to transform spaces and bring new perspectives to life. Today, we pay tribute to the one who made art a universal language and a permanent revolution.
See Picasso’s works