Monday, February 10, 2025

Artist of the Day, February 10, 2025: Francis Picabia, a French painter. (#2214)

Francis Picabia (1879 –1953) was a French avant-garde painter. After experimenting with Impressionism and Pointillism, Picabia became associated with Cubism. His highly abstract planar compositions were colorful and rich in contrasts. He was one of the early major figures of the Dada movement in the United States and in France. He was later briefly associated with Surrealism, but would soon turn his back on the art establishment.

Once known as "Papa Dada," Picabia was one of the principle figures of the Dada movement. A friend and associate of Marcel Duchamp, he became known for a rich variety of work ranging from strange, comic-erotic images of machine parts to text-based paintings that foreshadow aspects of Conceptual art. Even after Dada had been supplanted by other styles, the French painter and writer went on to explore a diverse and almost incoherent mix of styles. He shifted easily between abstraction and figuration at a time when artists clung steadfastly to one approach, and his gleeful disregard for the conventions of modern art encouraged some remarkable innovations even later in his career, from the layered Transparency series of the 1920s to the kitsch, erotic nudes of the early 1940s. Picabia remains revered by contemporary painters as one of the century's most intriguing and inscrutable artists.

In the 1910s, Picabia shared the interests of a number of artists who emerged in the wake of Cubism, and who were inspired less by the movement's preoccupation with problems of representation than by the way the style could evoke qualities of the modern, urban, and mechanistic world. Initially, these interests informed his abstract painting, but his attraction to machines would also shape his early Dada work, for Picabia, humans were nothing but machines, ruled not by their rational minds, but by a range of compulsive hungers.

Picabia was central to the Dada movement when it began to emerge in Paris in the early 1920s, and his work quickly abandoned many of the technical concerns that had animated his previous work. He began to use text in his pictures and collages and to create more explicitly scandalous images attacking conventional notions of morality, religion, and law. While the work was animated by the Dada movement's rage against the European culture that had led to the carnage of World War I, Picabia's attacks often have the sprightly, coarse comedy of the court jester. They reflect an artist with no respect for any conventions, not even art, since art was just another facet of the wider culture he rejected.

Figurative imagery was central to Picabia's work from the mid-1920s to the mid-1940s, when he was inspired by Spanish subjects, Romanesque and Renaissance sources, images of monsters, and, later, nudes found in soft porn magazines. Initially he united many of these disparate motifs in the Transparency pictures, complexly layering them and piling them on top of each other to provoke confusion and strange associations. Some critics have described the Transparencies as occult visions, or Surrealist dream images, and although Picabia rejected any association with the Surrealists, he steadfastly refused to explain their content. Picabia always handled these motifs with the same playful and anarchic spirit that had animated his Dada work.

Picabia learned early on that abstraction could be used to evoke not only qualities of machines, but also to evoke mystery and eroticism. This ensured that abstract painting would be one of the mainstays of his career. He returned to it even in his last years, during which he attributed his inspiration to the obscure recesses of his mind, as he had always done.

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Francis Picabia
Self-portrait, circa 1940

Roofs of Paris, circa 1900
Reveil matin, circa 1901
Portrait of Mistinguett, circa 1907
Still life in the Garden, circa 1908
 Sedell, circa 1909
Dances at the Spring, circa 1912
Figure triste, circa 1912
La Source, circa 1912
The Procession, Seville, circa 1912
Ballerina on an ocean liner, circa 1913
Je revois en souvenir ma chère Udnie, circa 1914
Very Rare Picture of Earth, circa 1915
Voilà la fille née sans mère, circa 1916
Daughter Born without Mother, circa 1917
Love Parade, circa 1917
Machine Turn Quickly, circa 1918
Balance, circa 1919
Rastadada, circa 1920
Feathers, circa 1921
Optophone I, circa 1921
La feuille de vigne, circa 1922
La Nuit espagnole, circa 1922
Résonateur, circa 1922
Totalisateur, circa 1922
Breasts, circa 1924
The Handsome Pork Butcher, circa 1924
Match woman, circa 1925
Jeune fille, circa 1926
Adam and Eve, circa 1931
Pierrot, circa 1932

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