After 391: Picabia's early multimedia experiments

By Chris Joseph, 27 June, 2012
Author
Language
Year
License
CC Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike
Record Status
Abstract (in English)

This essay attempts to answer a simple question: why did Francis Picabia stop publishing 391? By October 1924, when the final issue was published, 391 was the longest running magazine related to dada and the burgeoning surrealist movement, and Picabia was well established as one of the premiere avant-gardists in Paris and beyond, with literary, artistic and personal connections to all the major players in the movements that had turned the art world upside down for almost a decade. What caused him to suddenly cease publication of his provocative (but well respected) journal?

(Source: author's abstract.)