Picasso painted "Guernica" as a brutally honest version of its inspiration. There was only horror and disaster in the painting, making for a bold condemnation against the then-recent tragedy and a harsh jab against the people responsible.
It's difficult to classify a painting along with works of literature to represent a particular movement, but "Guernica" could be grouped with English Modernism in respect to a couple of particular characteristics. One aspect of the painting that reflects Modernist traits is the sheer unrelenting tone of tragedy that the painting evokes. Several, if not most, Modernist poems were constantly bleak and upsetting. One prime example of this type of Modernist poem is T.S. Eliot's "The Hollow Men," which presents users with a harsh reality in a brutally honest light, just like Picasso's "Guernica." A mother cradles her dead child, a soldier lies fallen on the ground, a trio of women appear to be