An exhibition at Hauser & Wirth explores how the master of genre hopping embraced an entirely different style during his final decade.
The title of this work, L'Oeil Cacodylate, or the Cacodylic Eye, is based on this block letter inscription that Picabia painted at the top. And this inscribed title, along with the big brown eye you ...
Francis Picabia created classically inspired figures not tied to specific stories, while Giorgio de Chirico was fascinated by the mythological figure of Ariadne. Between 1927 and the early 1930s, ...
At Manifesta 11, amidst celebrations of the Dada centenary, Barnaby Smith finds some very dirty art in one of Europe's cleanest cities If you’ve read something you love on our site today, please ...
Picabia moved to the south of France in 1925, and that move precipitated a new style, a new way of working, that has come to be referred to as his monster paintings, and that are frequently associated ...