When Harry Met Pablo: Truman, Picasso, and the Cold War Politics of Modern Art
4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars | 18 ratings
Price: 12.28
Last update: 07-15-2024
Top reviews from the United States
charles peterson
5.0 out of 5 stars
Delightful and Informative
Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2024
This is delightful book about Harry Truman’s 1958 trip with Bess and their friends, Sam and Dorothy Rosenman, to Italy and the south of France and the afternoon they spent with Pablo Picasso. The book provides a broad but excellent overview of both modern art and of American politics in the early and mid twentieth century. The first half of the book focuses on art. The second focuses on politics, the trip and on the personalities of Truman and Picasso. Excellent reading!!
Paul Kiczek
4.0 out of 5 stars
When a Picture is Worth a Thousand Questions
Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 2023
In the great tug of war of existential beliefs, there’s always a point and counterpoint. But, it's a universal law that everything changes with the passing of time. Maybe we soften or maybe we learn to live with opposing points of view. This is a story of how contradictory lives and beliefs co-exist and come together, at least briefly, in odd and unexpected ways.
A photo of Picasso shaking hands with Truman seemed to have been the perfect set piece for Algeo’s travel back in time to explore a hopeful period where stark contractions co-existed. It was clear. There was a good, bad and ugly. But, in the post World War II era everything was re-aligning in art, music and politics.
Their 1958 meeting occurred during the cold war after one of the most violent and consequential periods known to man. Truman, a popular democratic everyman, used his might to win a war by unrepentantly authorizing the killing of millions to justify the end. Picasso, on the other hand, was a famous recluse artist who promoted peace and was an unrepentant communist. They were polar opposites in almost every way. If a photo is worth a thousand words this one was worth a thousand questions,
When Harry Meets Pablo provides an intriguing history of how the definition of art was changing in the mid 1900’s. The first half of the book paints a picture of how America was reacting to the awakening of a new form of “modern art” exemplified by Picasso and other European artists. The book discusses how the new art form was received and nurtured by creating such institutions as MoMA. Special gallery events and even a traveling show were promoted to allow the public to experience the new form of art. Even the government promoted a cultural awakening to art through the Advancing American Art program.
At the time of the “red scare”, a relatively unknown, but deeply conservative, Republican Michigan congressman named George A. Dondero played an outsized role in stopping government art programs, much as was played out in the McCarthy hearings at the time. He declared modern art an infiltration of communism and blacklisted many artists as communist sympathizers - even though communist dictators like Stalin would have nothing to do with it.
Slowly, in America, the existing convention of realistic art gave way to an acceptance of the modern style by the middle of the century. But not everyone agreed that this was “art”. Truman, for one, often called it “ham and eggs” art disparaging the skill and impact it had. He was not alone. But at least Harry appreciated the difference of opinion and fought for an artist’s freedom of expression.
The second half of the book offers a unique look at a world attempting to regain its post-war balance. After his presidency, Truman planned to slip away to his Missouri home from Washington on a public train and once again lead a normal civilian life. Harry soon learned that the public was still interested in his life and thoughts. He was chased down by fans and the press everywhere he went.
Sam Rosenman, an ex-judge and close advisor to Franklin Roosevelt helped create the New Deal strategy. He was to continue to become a “consiglieri” to Harry while he was president. He and his wife Dorothy became close personal friends with Harry and Bess. Sam’s law partner Ralph Colin, a well-known collector of modern art and trustee at MoMA, educated Sam on the new modern style. Soon, Rosenman and Truman were two friends with at least one contrary point of view - “What is art”?
Truman asked Rosenman and his wife Dorothy to join him and Bess on a European vacation in mid-1958. The cross-Atlantic voyage by ship would take them to ports in Italy and eventually Cannes in France. Coincidentally, Picasso’s home was in Vallauris, in the hills above Cannes
A plot for a meeting was apparently hatched clandestinely by Alfred Barr, founder and chief executive of MoMA who had helped Picasso gain recognition in America and wanted to promote modern art. Truman a family man of modest means was to meet Picasso, a rich and famous womanizer at Picasso’s home. No doubt Sam Rosenman also had a hand in arranging the meeting. But how was that to be done when the two men, in the twilight of their careers, seemed to have nothing in common except their age?
Here’s where the story becomes hazy as Picasso, famously a recluse, graciously agrees to meet with Truman at his Villa La Californie for the day. The Truman’s and Rosenman’s spend most of the day together with Picasso graciously showing them around his studio and nearby town famous for his pottery. There is no real reporting of what transpired between them but photos seem to reveal a cordial if not enjoyable visit. We see photos and speculate what that day might have been. The rest is up to our imagination.
The meeting made a small story buried in the news, as other world events stole the limelight. We don’t know if the meeting made an impact on anyone. Perhaps it just was a courteous and friendly call or maybe a sign that time had soften the difference between different points of view. Not knowing the details, leaves the reader with unanswered questions of what might have happened when opposites come together.
A photo of Picasso shaking hands with Truman seemed to have been the perfect set piece for Algeo’s travel back in time to explore a hopeful period where stark contractions co-existed. It was clear. There was a good, bad and ugly. But, in the post World War II era everything was re-aligning in art, music and politics.
Their 1958 meeting occurred during the cold war after one of the most violent and consequential periods known to man. Truman, a popular democratic everyman, used his might to win a war by unrepentantly authorizing the killing of millions to justify the end. Picasso, on the other hand, was a famous recluse artist who promoted peace and was an unrepentant communist. They were polar opposites in almost every way. If a photo is worth a thousand words this one was worth a thousand questions,
When Harry Meets Pablo provides an intriguing history of how the definition of art was changing in the mid 1900’s. The first half of the book paints a picture of how America was reacting to the awakening of a new form of “modern art” exemplified by Picasso and other European artists. The book discusses how the new art form was received and nurtured by creating such institutions as MoMA. Special gallery events and even a traveling show were promoted to allow the public to experience the new form of art. Even the government promoted a cultural awakening to art through the Advancing American Art program.
At the time of the “red scare”, a relatively unknown, but deeply conservative, Republican Michigan congressman named George A. Dondero played an outsized role in stopping government art programs, much as was played out in the McCarthy hearings at the time. He declared modern art an infiltration of communism and blacklisted many artists as communist sympathizers - even though communist dictators like Stalin would have nothing to do with it.
Slowly, in America, the existing convention of realistic art gave way to an acceptance of the modern style by the middle of the century. But not everyone agreed that this was “art”. Truman, for one, often called it “ham and eggs” art disparaging the skill and impact it had. He was not alone. But at least Harry appreciated the difference of opinion and fought for an artist’s freedom of expression.
The second half of the book offers a unique look at a world attempting to regain its post-war balance. After his presidency, Truman planned to slip away to his Missouri home from Washington on a public train and once again lead a normal civilian life. Harry soon learned that the public was still interested in his life and thoughts. He was chased down by fans and the press everywhere he went.
Sam Rosenman, an ex-judge and close advisor to Franklin Roosevelt helped create the New Deal strategy. He was to continue to become a “consiglieri” to Harry while he was president. He and his wife Dorothy became close personal friends with Harry and Bess. Sam’s law partner Ralph Colin, a well-known collector of modern art and trustee at MoMA, educated Sam on the new modern style. Soon, Rosenman and Truman were two friends with at least one contrary point of view - “What is art”?
Truman asked Rosenman and his wife Dorothy to join him and Bess on a European vacation in mid-1958. The cross-Atlantic voyage by ship would take them to ports in Italy and eventually Cannes in France. Coincidentally, Picasso’s home was in Vallauris, in the hills above Cannes
A plot for a meeting was apparently hatched clandestinely by Alfred Barr, founder and chief executive of MoMA who had helped Picasso gain recognition in America and wanted to promote modern art. Truman a family man of modest means was to meet Picasso, a rich and famous womanizer at Picasso’s home. No doubt Sam Rosenman also had a hand in arranging the meeting. But how was that to be done when the two men, in the twilight of their careers, seemed to have nothing in common except their age?
Here’s where the story becomes hazy as Picasso, famously a recluse, graciously agrees to meet with Truman at his Villa La Californie for the day. The Truman’s and Rosenman’s spend most of the day together with Picasso graciously showing them around his studio and nearby town famous for his pottery. There is no real reporting of what transpired between them but photos seem to reveal a cordial if not enjoyable visit. We see photos and speculate what that day might have been. The rest is up to our imagination.
The meeting made a small story buried in the news, as other world events stole the limelight. We don’t know if the meeting made an impact on anyone. Perhaps it just was a courteous and friendly call or maybe a sign that time had soften the difference between different points of view. Not knowing the details, leaves the reader with unanswered questions of what might have happened when opposites come together.
jopet
5.0 out of 5 stars
Facsinating Story about Modern Art during the Cold War
Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2023
When Harry Met Pablo is a smart and entertaining look at a small moment of history forgotten for the most part, but all the more compelling because of its obscureness. Algeo, author of many books, specializes in finding and bringing to life events like these. Some of his past books have explored 1) when, in the nascent NFL, the Eagles and Steelers merged for a season (becoming the Steagles) in the 1940s because of the shortage of men during WWII; 2) the craze for endurance walking as a sport in the US in the second half of the 19th century (Pedestrianism, my favorite); 3) Harry and Bess Truman's lengthy road trip, alone and with no Secret Service, shortly after he'd left office (Harry Truman's Excellent Adventure); and 4) Grover Cleveland's secret operation to remove a potentially life-threatening jaw tumor (The President Is a Sick Man). All of these are excellent as well as his other books.
When Harry Met Pablo details Truman and his wife spending the day with Picasso in France while they were on a Mediterranean cruise, several years after he'd left office. To give the event context, the author discusses why "modern" art was so contentious in the mid 1950s amid the Cold War and Republican paranoia. Truman disliked modern art (it's all "ham and eggs") but firmly believed in an artist's right to express him- or herself. So the idea of these two meeting is incongruous at best.
When Harry Met Pablo is a very entertaining read and interesting in the sense that the creator of arguably the greatest anti-war work of art, Guernica (about the bombing of civilians no less), broke bread with the person that gave the green light to Hiroshima. And it seems like they had an enjoyable afternoon. Fascinating.
I thoroughly enjoyed it.
When Harry Met Pablo details Truman and his wife spending the day with Picasso in France while they were on a Mediterranean cruise, several years after he'd left office. To give the event context, the author discusses why "modern" art was so contentious in the mid 1950s amid the Cold War and Republican paranoia. Truman disliked modern art (it's all "ham and eggs") but firmly believed in an artist's right to express him- or herself. So the idea of these two meeting is incongruous at best.
When Harry Met Pablo is a very entertaining read and interesting in the sense that the creator of arguably the greatest anti-war work of art, Guernica (about the bombing of civilians no less), broke bread with the person that gave the green light to Hiroshima. And it seems like they had an enjoyable afternoon. Fascinating.
I thoroughly enjoyed it.
ColorfulClay
5.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting book about an interesting time in America.
Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2024
An interesting book about an interesting time in an American history, the McCarthy era. The lesson to be learned from this book is that we can be civil to people we don’t see eye to eye with. That’s such an important lesson for today. In fact, there are many parallels between what’s going on in politics and art today, with the McCarthy Era of the 1950’s.
STEVEN D DRUMMOND
5.0 out of 5 stars
Who knew? What a fun book.
Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2024
This book is full of surprises. A fascinating tour through the world of modern art at mid-century, and yet another in a long line of things you didn't know about Harry Truman! A really enjoyable read.
Stacy Roth
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fascinating history book
Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2023
Harry Truman and Pablo Picasso were about as different as you could imagine – the president who authorized the dropping of the atomic bomb hated modern art, while the cubist painter was a communist. Nevertheless, Alfred Barr Jr. managed to set up a meeting between the two to send a message to the world that modern art is not evil. This book covers the background of both men, as well as politics and art in the decades leading up to their meeting.
I enjoyed reading about these two very different men, the world they lived in, and what a historic moment it was when they met. This will be an easy book for anyone to follow, regardless of your knowledge of early 20th century politics and art; the information is shared well, and the story is quite readable. Matthew Algeo did an excellent job narrating the audiobook. I recommend this book for politics and art enthusiasts.
Many thanks to NetGalley for providing me an audio ARC of this book.
I enjoyed reading about these two very different men, the world they lived in, and what a historic moment it was when they met. This will be an easy book for anyone to follow, regardless of your knowledge of early 20th century politics and art; the information is shared well, and the story is quite readable. Matthew Algeo did an excellent job narrating the audiobook. I recommend this book for politics and art enthusiasts.
Many thanks to NetGalley for providing me an audio ARC of this book.