Statices, Francis Picabia Transparencies Series
BUY WITH CONFIDENCE
Couldn't load pickup availability
Rich in imagery and enigmatic in its meaning, Statices is a captivating example of Francis Picabia’s celebrated Transparency paintings, a series of works named for their simultaneous depiction of multiple transparent images, dramatically layered atop one another in an effect reminiscent of multiple-exposure photography. The artist had previously played with superimposition in the illusory cinematographic techniques of his 1924 film, Entr’acte, as well as in his paintings from the Monsters and Espagnoles series. In each of these, rather than using the painting as a window to another world, normalising the illusionism at play, Picabia sought to stimulate the imagination by creating a surreal inter-lapping of imagery that confounded traditional reading. He traced the genesis of this fascination with the layering of transparent images to a revelatory moment in a café in Marseille where, on the glass of a window, the reflection of the interior appeared superimposed upon the outside view (Francis Picabia dans les collections du Centre Pompidou Musée d’art Moderne, exh. cat., Paris, 2003, p. 71). Drawing on classical imagery of biblical mythological, and art historical subjects, Picabia uses this technique to overlap and interlace multiple figures in a single composition, allowing their contours to converge and intersect in a confused array, deliberately challenging our understanding of the imagery before us.
Picabia drew on a multitude of visual sources for the Transparencies, using prints and reproductions of classical sculpture, Renaissance paintings and Catalan frescoes, to build his compositions. Picabia’s son, Lorenzo, recalls his father having ‘a trunkful of art books in his studio,’ from which he most likely appropriated the majority of these images (Lorenzo Everling, quoted in M. Borràs, Picabia, transl. by K. Lyons, Paris, 1985, p. 340). In Statices the influence of Sandro Botticelli is particularly evident, with the linear, delicate beauty of the two female faces reminiscent of figures from both the Bardi Altarpiece and Allegory of Spring (Primavera). Picabia reduces their profiles to a series of simplified outlines, stripping away the life-like modelling of their faces and fattening the images in a deliberate denial of painterly illusionism. A defining feature of the Transparencies series, this technique creates an otherworldly pictorial space, devoid of the traditional laws of perspective, in which the figures appear to float and overlap one another in an ethereal manner. Marcel Duchamp, writing twenty years after the Transparencies were created, explained that through this novel and highly original approach, Picabia succeeded in suggesting the third dimension without recurring to mathematical perspective, pushing figuration to new terrains (M. Duchamp, ‘Francis Picabia: Painter, Writer,’ pp. 4-5, in Collection of the Société Anonyme: Museum of Modern Art 1920, New Haven, 1950, p. 5).
Behind these two ethereal female figures, an elegant classical sculpture is captured in delicate shades of blue, her sensuous curves modelled using a rich interplay of shadow, which lends a sense of weight and three-dimensionality to her form. This figure’s pose is mirrored by a second statuesque nude facing her, whose body appears as a visual opposite to hers, its arms raised in the same manner, its head gently tilted to the side, but its entire form turned away from us, so that only the back remains visible. The artist uses a subtle grey-scale to render this second statue, which offers a striking contrast to the vibrant blues of the sculpture facing us. The relationship between these two figures demonstrates the growing importance of colour in the Transparencies of this period, as Picabia began to introduce different tones as a means of distinguishing the overlapping forms from one another, and in so doing, enhance the juxtapositions and connections between each of the layers of the image. This richness of colour is continued in the orange outline used by the artist to delineate the merman in the foreground of the image, whose body curves in an elegant line across the composition, his fish tail disappearing in and out of the water before curling into a dramatic swirl at the far right hand side of the image. Although the precise source for this image remains unclear, his lithe, muscular body, and the laurel wreath clasped in his right hand suggest that Picabia has plucked him from a monument from Greco-Roman antiquity. However, although some scholars have seen the use of these classical sources as relating to the retour à l’ordre which had swept through the European art world following the end of the First World War, Picabia’s Transparencies seem to work more as provocative pastiches rather than reverent homages to the past. As he once proclaimed: ‘Our back is enough to contemplate the respectful past’ (Picabia, in 1930, quoted in Francis Picabia: Singulier ideal, exh. cat., Paris, 2003, p. 314).
Chosen for the mysterious effects of their juxtaposition with one another, the layered images in Statices combine to form an enigmatic, dream-like subject. By divorcing his source material from their original narrative and allegorical contexts, the artist forces these figures to enter in to new, surreal relationships with one another. This sense of mystery continues in Picabia’s choice of titles for the Transparency paintings, with a large number, including Statices, taken at random from Paul Girod’s guide to butterflies and moths, L’Atlas de poche des papillons de France, Suisse et Belgique. Indeed, the word statices may have been derived from the scientific name for the common Forester moth, Adscita statices, a small green species typically seen across Europe in June and July. However, the connection between this title and the contents of the painting is never communicated to the viewer, leaving its meaning an enigma to all but the artist.
Francis Picabia (22 January 1879 – 30 November 1953) was a French avant-garde painter, poet and typographist. After experimenting with Impressionism and Pointillism, Picabia became associated with Cubism. His highly abstract planar compositions were colourful and rich in contrasts. He was one of the early major figures of the Dada movement in the United States and in France. He was later briefly associated with Surrealism, but would soon turn his back on the art establishment.
All prints are made using archival art stocks and UV pigment inks to give up to 200 years life. Prints are sold unframed and unmounted.
All orders for unframed fine art prints and original paintings are dispatched within 2 working days of receipt of payment.
Orders for custom framed prints are dispatched within 4 working days.
All orders are fully tracked from dispatch to delivery at your home or business.
All print and original painting orders are fully insured against loss or damage in transit. We refund or replace any damaged or lost orders.
Buy with confidence - read what our satisfied customers have to say - Reviews
Fine art papers are printed without any additional white border Please let us know at the time of ordering if you would like a small additional white border.
Rolled canvas options have an additional white border of approximately 2.5 inches (7cm) on all 4 sides to aid stretching.
Ready to hang canvas panels are stretched on 1.5 inch deep solid pine frames from sustainable forestry sources. The image is mirrored on all 4 sides to give an aesthetically pleasing finish.
Why not have us gift wrap your order and attach a personalised message to the recipient. Available for all orders. Each order is hand wrapped in high quality gift wrap with meatllic ribbon and bow. Your personalised message is printed on a card which is included with your order.
Have your hand wrapped gift delivered directly to the recipient.
Full tracking and insurance included with every order.
Please note design may vary depending upon availability
Just purchase the gift wrap option HERE
We have a wide range of frames in standard sizes and we also make custom size frames.
To order a framed print:
1. select the print size you would like along with the print materials (matte paper, fine art paper).
2. Add your print choice to the basket.
3. Choose from our range of frames
4. Select the same size as the print you have added to your basket. If the frame size you want is not listed please contact us
5. Choose from the mount or no-mount option
6. Add your frame choice to the basket
7. Proceed to checkout.
Why Choose GalleryThane?
- Printed and framed in-house
- Free UK delivery
- Fast international delivery
- Tracking and insurance included in every order
- Fast 1-3 day dispatch
- Gift wrapping service available
- Gallery quality materials
- Sustainable, eco-friendly packaging
- Great customer support
What makes our Prints and Canvas Panels so special
Latest Giclee Printing Technology
We have invested in the latest wide format print technology to produce museum quality giclee prints utilising the highest quality pigment inks to give outstanding colour reproduction.
Museum Quality Archival Fine Art Papers
We print on the finest quality fine art papers with textured, smooth and lustre finishes for prints which last a lifetime.
From aceo miniatures to 40x80 inch large format, every print has our lifetime quality guaranteee.
Solid Wood Frames, Cotton Canvas
All of the wood for our canvas panels and frames is responsibly sourced from manages forests. Our cotton canvas is completely seedless for the highest quality reproduction possible.