Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Picabia, Francis (1879–1953)
View through CrossRef
A cavalier individualist, Francis Picabia became an internationally renowned avant-garde artist, spearheading Paris and New York Dada with his friend Marcel Duchamp and also contributing to Dada in Zurich and Barcelona. Picabia was a car enthusiast who embraced modernity, viewing the machine as a form expressive of the modern spirit from which he drew a new and revolutionary artistic idiom. Picabia also drew upon the tenets of the Puteaux Group and, upon arriving in New York to exhibit at the Armory Show in 1913, was lauded as a leading Cubist. He worked for a time in Orphic Cubism, a blend of Cubist, Futurist, and Fauvist themes and techniques to which he added ‘‘abstracted’’ industrial and biomorphic forms. Although he maintained an interest in the figure, Picabia is known primarily for his early dialogue with abstraction and his development of a quasi-machine aesthetic. He looked to industrial diagrams for artistic inspiration and, upon returning to New York in 1915, during a period of involvement with photographer and modern arts patron Alfred Stieglitz’s famous 291 Gallery and journal, produced the famous Mechanomorph series. Depicting Stieglitz and his entourage as bizarre, seemingly dysfunctional, industrial forms, Picabia’s Mechanomorphs shaped the visual vocabulary of New York, and later Paris, Dada. Picabia’s ironic stance in relation to art and culture has prompted scholars to interpret his conflation of human and machine parts as also playful punning of morality, sexuality, and blind faith in technology.
Title: Picabia, Francis (1879–1953)
Description:
A cavalier individualist, Francis Picabia became an internationally renowned avant-garde artist, spearheading Paris and New York Dada with his friend Marcel Duchamp and also contributing to Dada in Zurich and Barcelona.
Picabia was a car enthusiast who embraced modernity, viewing the machine as a form expressive of the modern spirit from which he drew a new and revolutionary artistic idiom.
Picabia also drew upon the tenets of the Puteaux Group and, upon arriving in New York to exhibit at the Armory Show in 1913, was lauded as a leading Cubist.
He worked for a time in Orphic Cubism, a blend of Cubist, Futurist, and Fauvist themes and techniques to which he added ‘‘abstracted’’ industrial and biomorphic forms.
Although he maintained an interest in the figure, Picabia is known primarily for his early dialogue with abstraction and his development of a quasi-machine aesthetic.
He looked to industrial diagrams for artistic inspiration and, upon returning to New York in 1915, during a period of involvement with photographer and modern arts patron Alfred Stieglitz’s famous 291 Gallery and journal, produced the famous Mechanomorph series.
Depicting Stieglitz and his entourage as bizarre, seemingly dysfunctional, industrial forms, Picabia’s Mechanomorphs shaped the visual vocabulary of New York, and later Paris, Dada.
Picabia’s ironic stance in relation to art and culture has prompted scholars to interpret his conflation of human and machine parts as also playful punning of morality, sexuality, and blind faith in technology.
Related Results
Les machines de Salons de Francis Picabia
Les machines de Salons de Francis Picabia
Francis Picabia’ s « Salon » Paintings
Following the First World War (in which he didn’t take part), subversive artist Francis Picabia made his comeback on the Parisian art s...
[Sic] Picabia: Ego, Reaction, Reuse
[Sic] Picabia: Ego, Reaction, Reuse
Against the common view that appropriation—of images, words, and machines—was the surest mark of Francis Picabia's modernism, Verdier posits that Picabia's constant reuse of visual...
Der Konflikt von Tradition und Moderne in der Avantgarde. Dargestellt in den Romanen La vie secrète und Visages cachés von Salvador Dalí, Hebdomeros und Monsieur Dudron von Giorgio de Chirico sowie Caravansérail von Francis Picabia
Der Konflikt von Tradition und Moderne in der Avantgarde. Dargestellt in den Romanen La vie secrète und Visages cachés von Salvador Dalí, Hebdomeros und Monsieur Dudron von Giorgio de Chirico sowie Caravansérail von Francis Picabia
Der Konflikt von Tradition und Moderne in der Avantgarde. Dargestellt in den Romanen La vie secrète und Visages cachés von Salvador Dalí, Hebdemeros und Monsieur Dudron von Giorgio...
Picabia's ‘Caoutchouc’ and the Threshold of Abstraction
Picabia's ‘Caoutchouc’ and the Threshold of Abstraction
Des recherches récentes concernant la vie et les oeuvres de Francis Picabia ont suscité bien des interprétations sur le sens des titres énigmatiques que l’artiste a donnés aux tabl...
Morphologie autonome et morphologie verbale du français : une représentation de l'auxiliaire
Morphologie autonome et morphologie verbale du français : une représentation de l'auxiliaire
Within a Generative framework, specifically the Minimalist Program (Chomsky 1995) combined with what is known as Distributed Morphology theory, Picabia presents a description of ve...
1879-1880 MUSUL VİLAYETİ KITLIĞININ EKOLOJİK, İDARİ VE EKONOMİK BAĞLAMI
1879-1880 MUSUL VİLAYETİ KITLIĞININ EKOLOJİK, İDARİ VE EKONOMİK BAĞLAMI
Osmanlı belgelerinde kaht u gala olarak geçen kıtlık, yerel düzeyde ekseriyetle yetersiz ve dengesiz yağışlar sebebiyle toplumun temel besin kaynaklarından olan tahılda meydana gel...
The Body after Cubism
The Body after Cubism
While the relationship of the body and Cubism has often been posed as one of opposition, one in which the return of the body is described as a lapse back into figuration and realis...
Hybridity and the Unifying Space of Painting: Larry Abramson in Conversation with Theolonius Marx
Hybridity and the Unifying Space of Painting: Larry Abramson in Conversation with Theolonius Marx
Abstract
While the drive toward homogeneous and pure visual languages was at the foundation of early twentieth-century utopian modernist art systems, the Dadaist and...

