The story of the exhibition that made America the center of the art world-and Picasso the most famous artist alive-in the shadow of World War II.
What The Reviewers Say
Phillip Lopate,
The New York Times Book Review
... fascinating, immensely readable.
Louis Menand,
The New Yorker
The story in Picasso’s War is well told, with an impressive level of biographical detail. As a picture of interwar transatlantic cultural exchange, it necessarily (because of the Quinn-Barr hook) leaves out a lot, notably Bauhaus and Dada, both of which had an impact on American art-making and American taste. But, as an account of the means by which Picasso and the styles of painting with which he was associated achieved cultural prestige in the United States, it’s an admirable and enjoyable book.
Henry L. Carrigan Jr.,
BookPage
Eakin’s rapturous storytelling makes Picasso’s War a spellbinding, page-turning read about this illuminating chapter in cultural history..
Publishers Weekly
Eakin showcases his journalist’s eye for detail with this fascinating look at a pivotal moment in modern American art history.