I didn't say that re Richardson,  but would've if I could've thought that fast. 
 Richardson's lengthy biography of Picasso is wonderful reading and we all 
await the final volume.  For a less starstruck critical view of Picasso's 
narcissism, see M. Gedo's work: Picasso, Art as Autobiography.
WC




________________________________
From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, April 2, 2009 11:56:36 AM
Subject: Re: On Monday on Charlie Rose: "Picasso: Mosqueteros"

William writes:

> BTW - I  enjoyed Cheerkep's back-handed compliment:  "Richardson deserves
> to
> be proud of what he's done in service of Picasso's reputation" -- as if
that
> reputation could have been enhanced one, teeny bit.
>
William catches me in my failure to appreciate the ambiguity of my line. I
did not have in mind RAISING Picasso's reputation in the eyes of the already
well-informed, but, rather, helping to SPREAD it and to fill in details. These
are among the "services" a good biography usually provides to its subject's
reputation. And over time it can even help preserve a subject's place in the
sun.
I have many times had my eye caught by a praising review of the biography of
a writer whose work I'd hardly tasted. After reading the bio, I then went on
to read an expanse of the writer's work. I'm sure there's been a good deal of
added attention by "laymen" to Picasso's work because of Richardson.



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