The Story of Les Demoiselles d'Avignon

Step closer. Look at me. I am not a quiet landscape or a gentle portrait with a soft, smiling face. I am a burst of energy, a clash of sharp angles and bold colors living on a giant canvas. In my world, everything is fractured and fascinating. Can you see the five figures who stand before you? They are not smooth and rounded like people you see every day. Their bodies are made of triangles and shards of pink, ochre, and white. Their faces might surprise you. Two of them look like they are wearing powerful, carved masks, with eyes that stare right through you. I am a puzzle made of paint. When people first see me, they often tilt their heads, their eyes wide with curiosity. I make them feel surprised, maybe a little confused, but always interested. I am not meant to be understood in a single glance. I am an idea, a challenge, a new way of seeing. I am the painting called Les Demoiselles d’Avignon.

My story begins in a wonderfully messy and exciting place in Paris, France. It was a building full of artists' studios called Le Bateau-Lavoir, which means “The Laundry Boat,” because it was a bit rickety and looked like the wash-houses on the river. My creator, a young and brilliant artist named Pablo Picasso, worked there in 1907. Pablo was full of fiery energy and big ideas. He was tired of paintings that just tried to copy the world exactly as it looked. He thought, “Why can’t a painting show how something feels, or how it looks from all sides at once?”. He wanted to break the rules. He decided to paint something that had never been seen before, something that would change art forever. Before he even touched his brush to my canvas, he spent months filling sketchbooks. He made hundreds of drawings, trying out different shapes and ideas. Can you imagine working on one idea for that long? He found inspiration in surprising places. He looked at ancient, blocky statues from his home country of Spain and at powerful, carved wooden masks from Africa. He loved how they weren't trying to be perfectly realistic, but were instead full of emotion and spirit. That’s why some of my figures have such striking, mask-like faces. He wanted to capture that raw power. When he finally finished painting me, he invited his friends to his studio. They walked in, looked at me, and fell silent. They were completely shocked. One friend said it was like Picasso wanted them to eat rope and drink gasoline. They thought I was ugly and strange. I wasn’t what they called ‘beautiful,’ but Picasso knew I was something more important: I was powerful.

Because I was so shocking, Picasso rolled me up and kept me hidden in his studio for years. The world wasn't quite ready for me. But my story didn't end there. I was like a secret that was too big to keep. Even though few people saw me, the idea I represented—of breaking things down into shapes and showing them from many angles—spread among other artists. I helped start a whole new style of art called Cubism. It was a revolutionary way of seeing, where artists painted objects as if you were walking all around them at the same time. Imagine painting a guitar by showing its front, its back, and its sides all in one picture. That was the magic of Cubism, and I was the spark that lit the fire. Eventually, I was unrolled and shown to the world. Decades later, in 1939, I traveled across the ocean and found my permanent home in a famous museum in New York City. Today, people from all over the world line up to see me. I am a reminder that beauty can be found in what is bold, strange, and new. I teach everyone who looks at me that you don’t have to follow the rules to create something amazing. All you need is your own unique way of seeing the world.

Reading Comprehension Questions

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Answer: When the story says Picasso wanted to 'break the rules of art,' it means he wanted to stop painting things exactly as they looked and instead create a new style that showed how he felt and saw things in his imagination.

Answer: Picasso's friends were shocked because the painting was not what they considered 'beautiful.' The figures were made of sharp angles and triangles instead of soft curves, and some of their faces looked like strange, carved masks.

Answer: Picasso was inspired by ancient, blocky statues from Spain and powerful, carved wooden masks from Africa.

Answer: He might have felt a little disappointed that his friends didn't understand, but he probably also felt proud and confident because he knew he had created something new and powerful that would change art, even if they weren't ready for it.

Answer: The painting was likely hidden because it was so different and shocking for its time. People weren't used to seeing art like that, and Picasso might have known they wouldn't be ready to understand or appreciate its importance yet.