Mas Notre-Dame-de-Vie 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 sCannesce for two more large studios. His bedroom was on the top floor, the living rooms and studio on the ground floor. Mougins 1967. - Photo by Edward Quinn

Mas Notre-Dame-de-Vie 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 sCannesce for two more large studios. His bedroom was on the top floor, the living rooms and studio on the ground floor. Mougins 1967.

A rustic, unpaved lane runs alongside Mas Notre-Dame-de-Vie near Mougins, the ivy-draped stone building where Pablo Picasso lived from 1961. Photographed in 1967, the house featured living rooms and a studio on the ground floor, with the artist’s bedroom on the top floor. The property was once owned by the Plunket family, who gave Picasso an Afghan hound named Kaboul as a moving-in present. A gnarled tree stands on the slope above the dry-stone retaining wall in the foreground.


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Houses

Filename:

pic670182.jpg



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