Published in conjunction with the first large-scale retrospective of Picabia's work in the United States since 1970, Francis Picabia: Our Heads Are Round so Our Thoughts Can Change Direction is a sweeping survey of the artist's profoundly innovative and influential career.
Anne Umland is the Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller Curator of Painting and Sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Cathérine Hug is Curator, 20th Century Art at the Kunsthaus Zürich, Switzerland.
...comprehensive and sumptuous...--Alfred Brendel "The New York
Review of Books"
...presents the full range of Picabia's practice--as a painter, a
poet, a letter writer, a party planner, and (not least) an
insatiable gadabout--but more than that, it definitively
establishes him as one of the key artists of the past 100 years, a
figure whose influence, at once comic and manic and dark, continues
to reverberate.--Andrew Russeth "Art News"
...A sort of hero for postmodernism...--Deborah Solomon "WNYC
News"
..not many historical figures have seemed as ripe [as Picabia] not
only for reevaluation, but simply to have her or his work seen
fully.--Sanford Schwartz "The New York Review of Books"
absurdly delightful paintings.--Robert Pincus-Witten "Artforum"
crackles with immediacy, popping free of its time to wink at the
present--Peter Schjeldahl "The New Yorker"
A leading light of the Dada movement... visually anticipating the
Pop, Conceptual and Postmodern art movements--Paul Laster
"CULTURED"
An avant-gardist par excellence...chameleonic...--Andrea K. Scott
"The New Yorker"
Experimenting first with Impressionism, then Pointillism, and then
Cubism and Dada, Francis Picabia (1879-1953) made himself
impossible to categorize.-- "Art News"
Francis Picabia: abrupt changes, wild jumps, adventurous curves...
finally, an endeavor aimed at revealing the whole Picabia.--Sabine
Altorfer "Aargauerzeitung"
From his earliest Impressionist efforts, through Cubist, Dadaist,
Surrealist and realist work... Picabia shifted fluidly with the
cultural moment, all the while vigorously denouncing the style he'd
just left behind...With copious illustrations and 16 essays, this
hefty catalog for the current retrospective at the Museum of Modern
Art attempts to chart a zigzag career that made up in energy what
it lacked in depth of exploration.--Albert Mobilio "The New York
Times"
Picabia found the right container for his instincts. Those
paintings make me deliriously happy; they sing. It's amazing they
exist.--David Salle "The Art Newspaper"
Picabia's fundamental comportment or attitude of refusal--of ironic
negation--was the constant running through the early and late work,
just as it was the constant running through his life...underneath
this apparent indifference is the unmistakable echo of a reflexive
negation, the constant assertion of a "no" resounding in a
self-chosen void.--Daniel Barbiero "Arteidolia"
Picabia's wit, use of language and found imagery, adn his style
changes, make him a precursor not just of Pop Art but of
Post-Modernist painting.--Roberta Smith "The New York Times"
The idiosyncratic French artist was an outlier on the royal road of
20th century modernism, and an interesting one.-- "Time
Magazine"
The pluralist of pluralists produced some masterpieces and more
unbelievably ugly paintings than any other artist in the twentieth
century - besting even Sigmar Polke and Martin Kippenberger - and I
cannot stop myself from loving them all.--Daniel Birnbaum
"Artforum, Best of 2016"
The French avant-garde artist's work was prescient about our era of
'post-truth' politics and culture.... He specializes in
disinformation and is the early Modernist embodiment of
'post-truth'.--Kenneth Goldsmith "The Art Newspaper"
The 10 Best Art Books of 2016--Rachel Corbett "New York Magazine"
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