Picabia and Friends, Céret
with Ellen Turner Hall
Francis Picabia, painter, innovator, satirist, philosopher, chameleon! The many facets of this multi-talented and ever-restless artist are on display at Céret museum’s latest exhibition. Alongside Picabia’s eclectic production, works by his fellow-artists bring to life the artistic experimentation of the period between 1913 and 1924.
Seeking a new language in response to the horror of the First World War, Picabia exiled himself from war-torn France and became the charismatic centre of a group of artists first in New York City and then in Barcelona.
The extreme modernity he found in Manhattan inspired Picabia to write in 1913, “New York is the cubist city, the futurist city. It expresses modern thought in its architecture, its life, its spirit.” There he created a series of “machine portraits” where mechanical objects replace human forms, abandoning figurative art in favour of clean lines and abstract composition as in Embarras.

In Barcelona Picabia shifted his attention to the creation of an avant-garde review called 391, a manifesto for anti-painting. His illustration for Roulette looks like it escaped from a mechanical drawing manual. Other contributors included Jean Arp, Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp.

As the group discovered Catalan customs and traditions, they integrated into their work twirling dancers, elaborate costumes and decorative fans. These are represented in the paintings of Albert Gleizes, Marie Laurencin, Sonia Delauney and Natalia Gontcharova. Seated women wearing elegant mantillas, are the subjects of two contrasting portraits : Picabia’s dark, sober Espagnole and Picasso’s light-infused pointillist Woman with Mantilla.
You can also see a short Dada-inspired film written by Picabia with music by Erik Satie. One absurd image follows another: deflating balloon heads, a dancer’s feet seen from below, a runaway hearse, a magician who makes the whole scene, including himself, disappear.
In the course of his career Picabia’s attention shifted from Cubism to Dadaism to Surrealism. At the end of his life his canvases were reduced to a series of dots, the ultimate abstraction.
Picabia, Méditerranée Picasso, Delauney, Laurencin… runs from 27 June to 29 November 2026. Open from 10h00 to 18h00. For details see: musee-ceret.com
