Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler was a German Jew who was born in
Mannheim. His family wanted him to pursue a career in banking or the stock market, but instead he decided to become an art dealer. At just 23 years of age, he opened an art gallery in Paris. Although he had no knowledge about selling art, he did have a keen interest in
avant-garde art. This was at a time when the French public still displayed a great amount of hostility towards modernist art, in particular the
Fauves. Picasso met Kahnweiler in 1908 after he opened his art gallery, Galerie Kahnweiler, in Paris at 28 rue Vignon in May 1907. He played an important role in the development of Cubism by representing Picasso as his art dealer, but also by introducing him to
Georges Braque. Kahnweiler supported the experimental style of Cubism by purchasing a large portion of the artists' works and also by publishing a book in 1920 titled
The Rise of Cubism. Kahnweiler had an interest in the work of challenging artists. He was drawn to artists like
Maurice de Vlaminck,
André Derain, and Braque. When he visited Picasso in his studio at the
Bateau-Lavoir, he found Picasso in a state of depression, caused by his friends' rejection of his latest experimental works. However, Kahnweiler was stunned and intrigued by Picasso's
Les Demoiselles d’Avignon and recognised that traditional painting techniques were being overthrown by a new art movement. This meeting between Picasso and Kahnweiler changed both their lives and cemented their reputations in relation to Cubism. Kahnweiler had enormous influence on the movement, by choosing which Cubist artist to support and which to reject, and continued to offer contracts to the artists he supported until 1914. Kahnweiler signed his first contract with Braque on 30 November 1912 and also signed with Derain, Picasso,
Maurice de Vlaminck,
Juan Gris and
Fernand Léger. These exclusive contracts gave him the right of first refusal for these artists’ works, ensuring that Kahnweiler became the sole supplier of their works until the First World War. Pierre Assouline wrote that, "Kahnweiler was one of the few people to believe in him completely and absolutely at a moment when Picasso had touched bottom... From that moment their fates were sealed." ==Description==