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Picasso’s “Guernica (1937)” Picasso’s “Guernica” is a wall oil painting on canvas that depicts the antiwar campaigns through artistic expressions. Picasso’s inspiration was to use the painting to caution people after the bombing of Guernica in Northern Spain. As a result, the artwork helped in creating awareness across the world concerning the Spanish Civil War in 1937 by German and Italian Warplanes. The main idea of the mural was to send a strong message to the world about the devastating nature of wars, such as the sufferings and loss of life or properties.
The symbolic elements of using the bull and the horse were to signify the strength of the warring sides. The other items in the mural entail the broken that represented the domination of the perpetrators on the citizens of Guernica. Picasso also used a newspaper in the painting to show how the media was influential in spreading the news of the war. Paintings are means that can also help with informing people about certain social happenings in artistic and expressive manner. The world gained attention of the Spanish war through Picasso’s art because it exposed the true negative effects on the ground.
The “Guernica” piece was a way of encouraging the Spanish citizens to shun agents of war by embracing each other during the battle. Although the mural was an abstract representation of the war, it contained the objects of war that were influential in conveying the message of an end to war in Spain. This implies that Picasso was a social campaigner, who tried to change the world through pencil on canvas.
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