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They also bought his "Nu Bleu: Souvenir de Biskra" (Blue Nude), which shocked the 1907 Salon des Independants. It's a huge painting depicting a reclining woman daubed in blue with oversized breasts and hips. To underscore the radical vision in the painting, it is hung next to more classic nudes, including Bonnard's 1900 "Siesta," a sensual version of a woman seen from the back on her bed. Even Picasso didn't understand the "Blue Nude." However, it ultimately had a profound influence on him that flowered in his famed painting "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon." Michael and Sarah ultimately became the main promoters of Matisse, while Gertrude befriended Picasso, collecting works from his rose and blue periods and pre-Cubist paintings like his 1907 "Nu a la Serviette" (Nude With a Towel). The exhibit includes numerous portraits of the Steins by Picasso, as well as letters, photos of them and audio readings by Gertrude. Gertrude Stein gained renown beyond the art world for her 1933 book, "Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas," who joined her on the rue de Fleurus. The family and its bountiful art collections dispersed as fascism took hold in Europe, with much of the works ending up in the United States. Gertrude remained in France until her death in 1946, and is buried along with Toklas in Paris' famed Pere Lachaise cemetery. Putting the exhibit together was a five-year task. Together with the Grand Palais it was organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. Already shown in San Francisco, it goes to the Met from Feb. 1 to June 3. The Paris exhibition continues through Jan. 16.
[Associated
Press;
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