Aaron Piepszny's 'Picasso People' Visited St Rose School
Aaron Piepsznyâs âPicasso Peopleâ Visited St Rose School
By Laurie Borst
On Friday, January 12, students at St Rose School enjoyed a presentation by âPicasso People,â a solo show that brought the life and times of Pablo Picasso to the stage. Aaron Piepszny has been traveling the East Coast for the past year-and-a-half using his theatrical skills to delight children and adults alike.
A prerecorded soundtrack of dialogue and music accompanies mime, puppetry, masks, costumes, and dance. Copies of Picassoâs work, some of which are explained during the performance, flank the stage.
Picasso was not just a painter. He also worked in ceramics and sculpture. Picasso found his inspiration in the world around him. Perhaps, Picasso is best known as the co-founder, with George Braque, of Cubism, a style of art where the subject is broken into pieces that are put back together in distorted form.
The first piece of work discussed was the sculpture âThe Bullâs Head.â Picassoâs inspiration came from a bicycle he saw leaning against a house. The seat suggested the bullâs head and the handlebars brought to mind the bullâs horns.
While this piece was described, Mr Piepszny appeared on stage dressed in black from head to toe complete with black cape. He is the torero, the bullfighter. He pulled a white âbullâs headâ from his cape. The sculpture is a bicycle seat and handlebars, painted white. Mr Piepszny danced around the stage and into the audience, creating the illusion of the bullfight.
The program moved on to a recounting of Picassoâs birth in 1881. When he was born, doctors told Picassoâs mother that he was a stillbirth â he had not started breathing on his own.
The story goes that a cigar-smoking uncle was in the room. The uncle exhaled cigar smoke that entered the babyâs nostrils, irritating them, and causing the child to cough and begin to breathe. Picassoâs uncle was the inspiration for several paintings.
Picasso lived for some time in Paris. He fit in well with the creative sorts he found in the cafes. The story is told of Picasso inviting people to a party, among them, three musicians. These three musicians became the inspiration for the well-known painting, âThe Three Musicians.â
At this point in the program, Mr Piepszny had selected three volunteers from the audience. Madison Iammozza, Jessica Spina, and Bobby Haskins were draped in costumes and handed instruments, as seen in the painting.
Mr Piepszny appeared in the diamond-patterned costume of the Harlequin, Picassoâs favorite circus performer. Picasso produced many paintings of harlequins.
The show wrapped up with a question and answer period. One student asked, âHow did people know what the painting was supposed to be?â
âPeople didnât get it at first,â Mr Piepszny replied. âIt took some time for Picassoâs work to be accepted.â
âWere all of Picassoâs paintings done in Cubism?â asked another.
Mr Piepszny explained some of the different periods in Picassoâs life. His early Blue Period echoed a depressed time in the artistâs life. This was followed by the Rose Period. Paintings during both of these periods, while focusing on one color, were done in a realistic style. Cubism arose several years after the Rose Period.
Third grader Christina DeBartolomeo shared her thoughts on the show. âIt was really cool and funny. I liked the âThree Musiciansâ best. But I like realistic paintings better.â
Owen Richards, also in third grade, echoed those feelings. âIt was fun. I like Picasso. I like realistic art better.â