Picabia, Francis, 1879-1953
Person
Dates
- Existence: 18790122 - 19531130
Found in 5 Collections and/or Records:
Che Cos'e il Libroggetto / Bertozzi, Gabriele-Aldo, editor ; Breton A ; Picabia F ; Amarger M ; Bentivoglio M ; Broutin GP ; Caruso L ; Dupont A ; Isou I ; Lemaitre M ; Satie A ; Leoncini E ; Lora-Totino A ; Poyet F ; Sabatier R ; Canal F ; Miccini E ; Tasiv G., 1989
Item
Identifier: CC-23078-23515
Scope and Contents
Publication includes reproductions of A. Dupont's "Nathalie et Justine" and "L'Art en Ciel," and I. Isou and A. Dupont's "Concerto pour Oeil et Oreille" which are held by the Sackner Archive. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dates:
1989
Dada in Zurich / Huelsenbeck R ; Lissitzky E ; Picabia F ; Serner W ; Tzara T ; Albert-Birot P ; Bolliger H ; Ball H ; Picabia F., 1985
Item
Identifier: CC-14737-15050
La Beaute Convulsive / Breton, Andre ; Duchamp M ; Lebel JJ ; Picabia F ; Jarry A ; Wolfli A., 1991
Item
Identifier: CC-22932-23368
Scope and Contents
The Sackners attended this exhibition. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dates:
1991
Making Mischief: Dada Invades New York / Crotti J ; Duchamp M ; Picabia F ; Ray M ; Roche J ; DeZayas M ; Apollinaire G ; Schwitters K ; Watson S., 1996
Item
Identifier: CC-27598-28675
Scope and Contents
In the words of David A. Ross, director of the Whitney Museum, "This exhibition proposes that as important as Dada was to the growth of American modernism, the ferment of New York played an equally critical role in the continuing evolution of Dada itself." He points out that even though Dada evolved in Zurich and Berlin, few immigrant notions were more quickly or deeply absorbed into American culture, because "American art, like America itself in the beginning of the century, was experiencing an analogous social, intellectual, and moral transformation, and the spirit and purpose of Dada provided a much needed catalyst." The Dada activity in New York centered around the Arensbergs, Duchamp, Picabia and Man Ray. When asked to define Dada, Man Ray echoed the words of Tristan Tzara and said that Dada was a state of mind. Unlike the artists in Europe, the Dadists in New York were driven by a conscious sense of irony, amusement, and genuine sense of humor. Selected chapters of this...
Dates:
1996