Mas Notre-Dame-de-Vie, Allèe des Cèdres, near Mougins where Pablo Picasso lived since 1961. The house was once owned by the Plunket family who gave the painter an Afghan hound called Kaboul as a moving-in present. When Pablo Picasso had filled the available rooms with his paintings and drawings, he had the terrace (left) covered to give him space for two more large studios. His bedroom was on the top floor, the living rooms and studio on the ground floor. Mougins 1962. - Photo by Edward Quinn

Mas Notre-Dame-de-Vie, Allèe des Cèdres, near Mougins where Pablo Picasso lived since 1961. The house was once owned by the Plunket family who gave the painter an Afghan hound called Kaboul as a moving-in present. When Pablo Picasso had filled the available rooms with his paintings and drawings, he had the terrace (left) covered to give him space for two more large studios. His bedroom was on the top floor, the living rooms and studio on the ground floor. Mougins 1962.

Mas Notre-Dame-de-Vie near Mougins, where Pablo Picasso lived from 1961, is seen here in 1962. The multi-story stone building, its facade partially covered in creeping vines, features arched doorways on the ground floor, which housed the artist’s living rooms and studio. His bedroom was on the top floor. To accommodate his prolific output, Picasso later enclosed a terrace to create two additional large studios. A dirt road lined with tall cypress trees leads past the rustic, secluded property.


Keywords:

Houses

Filename:

pic620038.jpg



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