Taschen via Artnet NewsArt & PhotographyNewsSee Picasso’s former muse and artist Françoise Gilot’s new workThe drawings are inspired by the 96-year-old’s travels in the late 70sShareLink copied ✔️September 3, 2018Art & PhotographyNewsTextEmma Pradella 96-year-old French painter and author Françoise Gilot – also known as Pablo Picasso’s former lover, muse, and mother of his two children – has released a new three-part edition of her sketches, which were first created during her travels in the late 70s. The watercolour drawings – often accompanied by text and purposely incomplete – are inspired by her time spent travelling with her second husband, specifically by the trips she took to Venice, India and Senegal from 1974 to 1981. The Venice travel book focuses on the city’s striking canals and palaces, but also on its Renaissance art repertoire, reproducing works by Veronese, Titian and Tintoretto, while the other two sketchbooks draw inspiration from local female figures: “a landscape is always there and the people are not,” Gilot said to the New York Times. “You can call it a diary. What I draw has meaning,” she added, “in my mind, I notice what I feel, and not what is there.” In India, Gilot used mainly black and white to portray the chaos of the city streets, but also working women wearing traditional saris and carrying heavy loads, while in Senegal, the painter turned to vibrant colours to depict the life in the villages near Dakar and the prosperous flora that serves as a natural backdrop. The travel sketchbooks, published by Taschen, come in a fold out box set that also include a conversation with the artist and are available to purchase here. h/t Artnet News A drawing of Senegal, Three Travel Sketchbooks: Venice, India, Senegal, Françoise GilotTaschen via Artnet NewsExpand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORELiz Johnson Arthur immortalises PDA, London’s iconic queer POC club nightThis ‘Sissy Institute’ show explores early trans internet cultureLife lessons from the legendary artist Greer LanktonPhotos of Medellín’s raw, tender and fearless skateboarding culture‘A space to let your guard down’: The story of NYC’s first Asian gay barInside the debut issue of After Noon, a magazine about the nowPalestine Is Everywhere: A new book is demanding art world solidarityThe standout images from Paris Photo 2025These photos capture the joy of connecting with strangersStephanie LaCava and Michella Bredahl on art and ‘messy’ womanhoodBeavers, benzos, and ASMR: What to see at the 2025 Shanghai BiennaleFinal photos from Chengdu’s queer club in the sky