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Preface ix
Introduction 1
1. Setting, Sources, Titles, and Time 19
2. The Making of a Painting 52
3. Art in the Flesh 81
4. The Sorcerer's Apprentice 111
5. L'Oiseau du BÉnin 152
6. The Global Brothel 185
7. Le Bordel Philosophique 222
Conclusions. The Creative Nexus 264
Acknowledgments 297
Sketchbooks: New Dating 300
Chronology 305
List of Illustrations 312
Notes 333
References 365
Index 415
Suzanne Preston Blier is Allen Whitehill Clowes Professor of Fine Arts and of African and African American Studies at Harvard University and the author and editor of numerous books, including Art and Risk in Ancient Yoruba: Ife History, Power, and Identity c. 1300.
"Blier uses a host of techniques including formal analysis, textual analysis, and broader global image culture to dig deep into this one painting. Most exciting is when she points out obvious but overlooked information in widely known documentation, including period photographs of Demoiselles in process that show how Picasso developed the composition. Ultimately, Blier offers a reading thoroughly of our time-one in which women are empowered and time and space compressed." - Maggie Taft (Booklist) "Blier offers a wide-ranging account of the genesis, sources, and context for Picasso’s influential masterpiece. In both cases it is especially timely and meaningful to have women shaping the conversation. . . . Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals." - E. Baden (Choice) "The book, which features hundreds of illustrations . . . is full of a vast and intriguing array of highways and forays into every possible connection that might suggest itself to construct this argument. As a Black feminist, I found most persuasive Blier’s proposition to table the idea of Les demoiselles as a brothel scene and see it, rather, as a reference to the turn-of-the-century fascination with the portrayal of racial types." - Michele Wallace (Artforum) “Every age has had its own interpretation of the Demoiselles d’Avignon and with it, its own narrative of Modernism.... Blier's interpretation is doubly interesting, directed as it is at cultural and gender identities and is, without doubt, the one which corresponds ... to our present.” - Maite Méndez Baiges (translated by Diana Mathieson) (African Studies Quarterly) “What makes Blier’s book truly remarkable is not only its attention to the details surrounding Picasso’s life and work in the years when he painted Les Demoiselles but also her forensic approach to the subject.” - Simon Gikandi (Art Journal) “Picasso’s Demoiselles is ... a lighthearted, even playful, book.... Blier is an extraordinary writer; her scholarly production is legendary, and her publications have shaped the field of African studies.” - Monica Blackmun Visonà (Art Journal)
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