Hera, Francis Picabia Transparencies Series

$7.00

Dispatches within 48 hrs, Tracked, insured worldwide delivery


Buy With Confidence

BUY WITH CONFIDENCE

Details

Hera, executed in 1929, is a major example from Francis Picabia's visually compelling series of paintings known as the Transparencies. In this picture, the heads of predominantly beautiful women float against a backdrop filled with a looming nude, plunging the viewer into the midst of an hallucinatory, sensual reverie. Picabia combined layers of imagery drawn from Classical, Renaissance and Catalan Romanesque art in the Transparencies with images derived from the natural world. He overlaid these with his own decorative motifs of gracefully spiralling lines and, in the case of Hera, executed this intoxicating synthesis via a rich mixture of gouache, pastel, charcoal and pencil.

The use of the term 'transparency', derived from photography, points to the visual effects of double and montaged images which appear in this series. Picabia had previously explored the optical effects of multiple layers of imagery in his Cubist and Orphist period, as well as in his preceding Monster paintings and in his film Entr'acte of 1924. The artistic possibilities of transparency had also been explored earlier by, amongst others, Marcel Duchamp in his famous The Large Glass (1912-23) and Man Ray in his Rayographs (see J. Mundy , ed., Duchamp, Man Ray, Picabia, exh. cat., London, 2008, p. 38). Duchamp connected the superimposition of images in Picabia's Transparencies with his own interest in multiple, shifting perspectives, particularly evident in his film Anemic Cinema (1926). Picabia's Transparencies, Duchamp wrote, 'express the feeling of a third dimension without the aid of perspective (M. Duchamp, quoted in J. Mundy, 'The Art of Friendship' in ibid.). Indeed Duchamp and Picabia were both later to sign the Manifeste dimensioniste which called for painting to expand into the third dimension, and sculpture into the fourth.

Like an artist's sketchbook showing the genesis of an idea, Hera features faces in profile and three quarter view, freely suspended before a nude, seen from the back. The pose of the nude with one leg raised is particularly erotic, an eroticism which is made all the more potent by the hands and faces which touch it. This motif of hands touching bodies features in many other paintings from this series and, perhaps, with its sexual connotations, reflects Picabia's statement that his Transparencies were expressions of his 'interior desires' (Picabia, quoted in W. Camfield, op.cit., 1979, p. 233). Although the imagery in Hera is complex, the mood evoked is one of tranquility and reverie. Hera was shown alongside Catax (see lot 107) at Picabia's exhibition of 1929, held at the Galerie Théophile Briant in Paris. Reviewing this exhibition, one commentator noted that Picabia succeeded in creating, 'a world of sensations, harmony and of thoughts' (E. Ramond, 'L'exposition Picabia', Paris Montparnasse, 15 November 1929, no. 10, p. 11 quoted in Francis Picabia dans les collections du Centre Pompidou, Musée national d'Art moderne, Paris, 2003, p. 72).

As in Catax, it is possible that the faces in Hera are derived from Renaissance or Classical sources. For some of the Transparencies, specific sources have been identified for the figures, most notably from the art of Sandro Botticelli and Piero della Francesca whose works Picabia copied from reproductions in books. Here, the face to the left, with its profoundly hooded eyes, bears close resemblance to Piero's serenely stylized female faces.

When he executed the Transparencies, Picabia was living on the antiquity-steeped Mediterranean coast and the painting's title, Hera, would seem to be an allusion to antiquity. Hera, the Goddess of women and marriage, was the wife of Zeus and one of his three sisters. The extent to which the present painting actually engages directly with this Classical source, however, is questionable. By now, the antiquity of the Mediterranean coast was no longer its main attraction, but rather its fashionability. It also attracted many artists, including Picabia, not just for its light and scenery but for its hedonistic lifestyle. It has been posited that the Transparencies reflect this new reality and the Classical allusions are subverted and decontextualised in these works to indicate the destabilising of the Classical tradition (see S. Cochran, 'An Alternative Classicism: Picabia with and against Picasso and de Chirico', in C. Green & J. M. Daehner, eds., Modern Antiquity: Picasso, de Chirico, Léger, Picabia, exh. cat., Los Angeles, 2011, pp. 31-41). Certainly it would appear that specific images and titles were chosen in the Transparencies not for their inherent content or allegorical associations, but rather for the mysterious, ambiguous effect of their juxtaposition. Indeed, it is known that Picabia took the titles of many of these works, including Hera, from a book on butterflies - Paul Girod's Poche des Papillons de France, Suisse et Belgique (see A. Pierre, Francis Picabia: la peinture sans aura, Paris, 2002). Camfield has remarked that this painting leads one, 'to muse about identities, relationships and the title. Pursuit of such musings may lead to an association with Hera Anthea (flowery) [at the temple of Hera Anthea at Argos an annual flower festival was celebrated], but there is no way to verify that facet of Hera for this painting, and finally, the indeterminate condition of such queries seems to accord with Picabia's work' (Camfield, op. cit., 1979, p. 237). It was this very indeterminacy and ambivalence which throughout his career Picabia so ingeniously exploited, whether in his earlier intriguing and perplexing Dada machinist imagery or in the later nudes of his so-called realist phase.

The Transparencies such as Hera signalled an exciting development for Picabia where, he claimed, 'all my instincts may have a free course' (Picabia, quoted ibid., p. 233-234). His novel appropriation and subversion of the art of the past to create these personal dream-like worlds was, moreover, a response to what he felt was the increasing monotony of much modern art. In this, the Transparencies foreshadow techniques employed by many Postmodern artists of the latter half of the Twentieth Century and were to profoundly influence the work of the contemporary painter and photographer Sigmar Polke.

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.

Available as a fine art print and as a stretched canvas panel (heavy fine art canvas stretched over 1.5 inch deep edge solid wood frame).

highest quality canvas panels

deep edge canvas prints

  

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.

 

Shipping

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

Size and Printed Materials

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.

Gift Wrap Option

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

Why Choose GalleryThane?

  • Printed and framed in-house
  • Free UK delivery
  • Free EU and USA delivery on orders over £200
  • 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
Popular Frames - All Sizes Available (Square, Landscape, Portrait, Panoramic)

What makes our Prints and Canvas Panels so special

latest wide format pigment ink printers

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 fine art papers

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.

cotton canvas stretched over solid wood frame

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.

Have Your Gift Wrapped

Giftwrapping available for all orders.

Have your gift sent directly to the recipient, beautifully wrapped with your personalised message to the recipient.

Frames and Mounts

Custom Frames and mounts in lots of colours. Have your print delivered mounted and framed - ready to hang on your wall.

Choose a Custom Frame

WHAT OUR CUSTOMERS SAY

This was a present for my wife and she loves it. The quality is very good. Thanks for your excellent service.

Fantastic packaging and a stunning print. Thank you!

Great quality and a good idea to include a 'free gift' mini-pic to show what the other finishes are like.

Really excellent print quality! I have just had my print framed and it looks great thank you

This arrived quickly and is great quality, thank you! :)

My art print arrived quickly and in excellent condition! Very high quality print! Thank you!!

love my print! Very fast professional service Thank you very much

I ordered the canvas panel as a gift for my sister and she was delighted the canvas is really good quality and perfectly stretched. The finish on the back was really profesionally done too

Amazing print well printed and a reasonable price

Customer Reviews

Be the first to write a review
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)