Respuestas
Respuesta:
Pablo Diego José Ruiz Picasso, later known by his second surname, was born on October 25, 1881, at No. 36 in the Plaza de la Merced in Málaga, as the first-born of the couple formed by the Basque painter José Ruiz Blasco and the Andalusian María Picasso López. The father was a professor of drawing at the Provincial School of Arts and Crafts, known as San Telmo School. Pablo's early childhood was between the family's economic difficulties and a close relationship between father and son, which both cultivated with devotion. The child was a scholar less than discreet, rather lazy and very distracted, but with an early facility for drawing, which Don José encouraged.
In 1891 the family moved to La Coruña, in whose Instituto da Guarda the services of the father as a teacher are required. Pablo began his pictorial essays, and three years later his father and first teacher gave him his own brushes and easels, admiring the talent of his son. In 1895, Ruiz Blasco obtained a teaching position at the Escola d'Arts i Oficis de la Llotja in Barcelona. Pablo solves in one day the exam exercises scheduled for a month, and is admitted to school. In 1896, when he was only fifteen years old, he installed his first workshop in the Calle de la Plata in the Ciudad Condal.
Two years later he obtained an honorable mention in the great exhibition of Madrid for his work Science and charity, still of an academic realism, in which the father has served as a model for the figure of a doctor. The distinction encourages him to give opposition to the course advanced in the Academy of San Fernando, while his works, influenced by El Greco and Toulouse-Lautrec, obtain new medals in Madrid and Malaga.
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