Photographs of Francis Picabia (who arrived in Zurich in 1918) and pages from his magazine, 391 – "every page must explode… art must be … useless and impossible to justify". Photograph at exhibition. Paintings by Picabia: Parade amoureuse (1917), Very Rare Painting on Earth (1915); Machine Turn Quickly / Machine, tournez vite (1916); Conversation I (1922). Triple photograph of Picabia; Around the Table, Marcel Duchamp’s 1917 quintuple photograph of himself, described as "the most hermetic and radical of all the anti-art Dadaists". Photographs of Duchamp’s family. Commentary on Duchamp’s "rapid succession of styles: Portrait of the Artist's Father (1910). Chess Game (1910). The Bush (1910), and his violent reaction "against paintin...
textFollowing his 1924 break with the Paris avant-garde, Francis Picabia (1879-1953) decamped to the...
The work of Marcel Duchamp occupies a unique and enigmatic place in the history of modern Western ar...
Art as a Joke. From Francis Picabia to Maurizio CattelanDada movement stripped art of seriousness, ...
Photographs of René Magritte and the Belgian Surrealist group. Au seuil de la liberté / The Thresh...
Photograph of Breton with several small sculptures. Commentary notes his increasing preoccupation w...
Sound poems by Schwitters over photographs of his Hanover Merzbau (1923-1937), one of his publicatio...
Time-lapse cinematography of clouds, images from the work of the Surrealists, interviews with artist...
Ernst creates "frottage", creating images from the impression of surfaces; quote from Ernst over dem...
Stéphanie Laudicina : Marcel Duchamp, Art Critic. In 1920, Marcel Duchamp founded, with Katherine D...
British Movietone News item, Liberation of Paris (1944); commentary points out that friends and coll...
Film of German crowds celebrating the end of the war. Dada reaches Berlin; film of military parades...
This "Commentary" article surveys the career of Francis Picabia, artist and writer, discusses a new ...
Textes en français et anglais.International audienceTroisième des quatre tomes du catalogue raisonné...
Francis Picabia’s Espagnoles – kitsch paintings of Spanish women in folkloric costume – are arguably...
Francis Picabia’ s « Salon » Paintings Following the First World War (in which he didn’t take part)...
textFollowing his 1924 break with the Paris avant-garde, Francis Picabia (1879-1953) decamped to the...
The work of Marcel Duchamp occupies a unique and enigmatic place in the history of modern Western ar...
Art as a Joke. From Francis Picabia to Maurizio CattelanDada movement stripped art of seriousness, ...
Photographs of René Magritte and the Belgian Surrealist group. Au seuil de la liberté / The Thresh...
Photograph of Breton with several small sculptures. Commentary notes his increasing preoccupation w...
Sound poems by Schwitters over photographs of his Hanover Merzbau (1923-1937), one of his publicatio...
Time-lapse cinematography of clouds, images from the work of the Surrealists, interviews with artist...
Ernst creates "frottage", creating images from the impression of surfaces; quote from Ernst over dem...
Stéphanie Laudicina : Marcel Duchamp, Art Critic. In 1920, Marcel Duchamp founded, with Katherine D...
British Movietone News item, Liberation of Paris (1944); commentary points out that friends and coll...
Film of German crowds celebrating the end of the war. Dada reaches Berlin; film of military parades...
This "Commentary" article surveys the career of Francis Picabia, artist and writer, discusses a new ...
Textes en français et anglais.International audienceTroisième des quatre tomes du catalogue raisonné...
Francis Picabia’s Espagnoles – kitsch paintings of Spanish women in folkloric costume – are arguably...
Francis Picabia’ s « Salon » Paintings Following the First World War (in which he didn’t take part)...
textFollowing his 1924 break with the Paris avant-garde, Francis Picabia (1879-1953) decamped to the...
The work of Marcel Duchamp occupies a unique and enigmatic place in the history of modern Western ar...
Art as a Joke. From Francis Picabia to Maurizio CattelanDada movement stripped art of seriousness, ...