New York: Francis Picabia ‘Late Paintings’ at Michael Werner Gallery through January 14, 2012

January 12th, 2012


Francis Picabia, Printemps (1942-43)

Currently being shown at Michael Werner Gallery in New York is an exhibition of the French surrealist/Dadaist painter Francis Picabia. The exhibition has a particular focus on the artists’ later works, during which he explored methods of painting beyond the conventional and expected of the time. While Picabia’s work stands alongside the exploratory French artists and thinkers of the early 20th century, it is also branded in his unique sensibilities, constantly changing and seemingly never satisfied.


Francis Picabia, Untitled (1936)

Picabia was notably associated with such visionaries as Marcel Duchamp and Jean Cocteau, and his work both reflects and furthers their respective intentions. However, when Duchamp effectively retired from painting, Picabia continued almost all the way until his death, constantly exploring and challenging his own work. The “Late Paintings” exhibition features the artists’ series of “kitsch” paintings, surrealist abstractions derived from images of Hollywood stars and pictures found in erotic magazines.


Francis Picabia, Espagnole a la Guitare (1926-27)

Though created over a half century ago, Picabia’s experiments with abstraction and the particulars of painting techniques remain timeless in their influence and scope. Alongside Picabia’s “kitsch” paintings are a collection of his so-called “transparent” paintings, which stand in contrast yet seem to inhabit the same world. Taken from photographs of Roman sculptures and also from Renaissance paintings, the works demonstrate the artist’s understanding of classical elements in art history and an ability to transform them in his own unique vision. He aims to be cryptic and disturbing, challenging the viewer with bold painting techniques and confounding them with the subject matter within. Indeed, much of the works are seen as through a foggy window; they are mysterious and distorted, and require acute attention from the viewer. Picabia died in 1953.


Francis Picabia, Composition (ca. 1940)


Installation View

– D. Furnal

Related Links:

Exhibition Site [Michael Werner Gallery]
Artist Biography [Francis Picabia]
Original Prankster: Francis Picabia at Michael Werner Gallery [Gallerist NY]
Gorgons in Disguise: Picabia’s Women [Artnet]