Francis Picabia (1979-1953)
Property from the Collection of a Prominent Baltimore Family
Francis Picabia (1979-1953)

Nature morte à la soupière

细节
Francis Picabia (1979-1953)
Nature morte à la soupière
signed 'Picabia' (lower right)
oil on canvas
28 7/8 x 36 3/8 in. (73.3 x 92.4 cm.)
Painted circa 1908
出版
M.L. Borràs, Picabia, New York, 1985, p. 505, no. 72 (illustrated, p. 85, fig. 183).
展览
Paris, Galerie Georges Petit, Exposition de tableaux par F. Picabia, March 1909.
拍场告示
Please note the correct title for this work is Nature morte à la soupière and it was painted circa 1908.

荣誉呈献

Stefany Sekara Morris
Stefany Sekara Morris

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拍品专文

The Comité Picabia has confirmed the authenticity of this painting.

Picabia's early neo-impressionist works, initially directed by the Impressionism of Claude Monet, Alfred Sisley and Camille Pissarro, were soon refined by a greater interest in form and composition. While the artist is most renowned for his dada and surrealist works, he is exceptional in that these early impressionist paintings were not merely a passing phase but rather a major period that found success and recognition among his peers.

According to William A. Camfield, "Through mid-1908, Picabia oscillated between objective and subjective modes of Impressionism, but in the autumn of 1908 both were supplanted by a third mode which may be described as neo-impressionist. As was his custom, Picabia revisited his old sites, this time reducing the composites to more simplified forms which are ranged in planes parallel to the picture surface and rendered with a system of uniformly size, brick-like brushstrokes. These features, reminiscent of the contemporary work of that proselytizing neo-impressionist Paul Signac, transmit a stronger sensation of structure, order and permanence. But in contrast to Signac, Picabia remains more concerned about the specific site, and his bright palette suggests less interest in neo-impressionist color theory than a concern for the blazing, natural light of the Midi and the influence of Fauvism" (Francis Picabia, His Art, Life and Times, Princeton, 1979, p. 13).