Mas Notre-Dame-de-Vie 1967 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. The terrace is 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 in the late Sixties/early Seventies. - Photo by Edward Quinn

Mas Notre-Dame-de-Vie 1967 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. The terrace is 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 in the late Sixties/early Seventies.

A sunlit view from Mas Notre-Dame-de-Vie, Pablo Picasso’s home near Mougins, captured in 1967. Framed by the dark silhouettes of fig leaves, the vista extends over a rustic stone wall towards a hillside dotted with villas, silvery-green olive groves, and slender cypress trees. Picasso had lived at the property since 1961, eventually covering the terrace to provide space for two more large studios.


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Houses

Filename:

pic670180.jpg



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