Francis
Picabia (1879–1953) was a French painter, illustrator,
designer, writer and editor, who was successively involved with the
art movements
Cubism,
Dada,
and
Surrealism.
He was the son of a Cuban diplomat father and a French mother. After
studying at the École des Arts Décoratifs (1895–97),
he painted for nearly six years in an Impressionist mode akin to that of
Alfred Sisley.
In 1909 he adopted a
Cubist
style, and, along with
Marcel Duchamp,
he helped found in 1911 the Section d'Or, a group of
Cubist
artists. Picabia went on to combine the Cubist style with its more
lyrical variation known as
Orphism
in such paintings as
I See Again in Memory My Dear Udnie (1913–14)
and
Edtaonisl (1913).
In these early paintings he portrayed assemblages of closely fitted,
metallic-looking abstract shapes. As Picabia moved away from
Cubism
to
Orphism,
his colors and shapes became softer.
In 1915 Picabia
traveled to New York, where he, Duchamp, and
Man Ray
began to
develop what became known as an American version of Dada. Here
Picabia exhibited at Alfred Stieglitz's gallery, 291, and
contributed to the proto-Dadaist review 291. About 1916
he gave up the
Cubist
style completely and began to produce the
images of satiric, machine like contrivances that are his chief
contribution to
Dadaism.
The drawing
Universal Prostitution (1916–19)
and the painting
Amorous Procession (1917)
are typical of his Dadaist phase; their association of mechanistic
forms with sexual allusions were successfully shocking satires of
bourgeois values.
In 1916 Picabia
returned to Europe. He settled in Barcelona, where he published the
first issues of his own satiric journal 391 (named in reference to
the New York review). He subsequently joined
Dadaist
movements in Paris and Zürich. In 1921 he renounced Dada on
the grounds that it was no longer vital and had lost its capacity
to shock. In 1925 he left Paris to settle in the south of France,
where he experimented with painting in various styles. He returned
to live in Paris in 1945, and he spent the final years of his life
painting in a mostly abstract mode. Picabia was notable for his
inventiveness, adaptability, absurdist humor, and disconcerting
changes of style.