| On April 27th,
1937, unprecedented atrocities are perpetrated on behalf of Franco against
the civilian population of a little Basque village in northern Spain.
Chosen for bombing practice by Hitler's burgeoning war machine, the hamlet
is pounded with high-explosive and incendiary bombs for over three hours.
Townspeople are cut down as they run from the crumbling buildings.
Guernica burns for three days. Sixteen hundred civilians are killed or
wounded.
Initial
reaction to the painting is overwhelmingly critical. The German fair guide
calls Guernica "a hodgepodge of body parts that any
four-year-old could have painted." It dismisses the mural as the
dream of a madman. Even the Soviets, who had sided with the Spanish
government against Franco, react coolly. Yet Picasso's tour de force
would become one of this century's most unsettling indictments of war.
When asked to
explain his symbolism, Picasso remarked, "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."
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