x
Painting
Other
Surrealism
1928
116.0 x 88.0 cmGiclée- eller lærredstryk i museumskvalitet med hurtig produktion og fleksible muligheder for finish.
Vælg mellem vores forudindstillede størrelser, der matcher kunstværkets originale proportioner.
Du kan indtaste dine egne mål for at passe til en specifik ramme eller et bestemt område. Hvis den valgte størrelse ikke stemmer overens med det originale billedes proportioner, vil vi enten beskære kunstværket eller udvide billedet med en spejlet eller ensfarvet kant. En digital mockup vil blive sendt til din godkendelse, før produktionen påbegyndes.
Bemærk venligst, at forhåndsvisningen på skærmen ikke afspejler den faktiske beskæring eller udvidelse. Kun mockuppen vil nøjagtigt vise den endelige komposition.
Selvom specialmål er tilgængelige, anbefaler vi at vælge et mål fra den foruddefinerede liste for at bevare de originale proportioner.
Verdensomspændende levering () på 2 uger i stedet for de sædvanlige 4/5 uger. (2 juli)
Craccae
Størrelse på reproduktion
To stand before Francis Picabia’s Craccae is to step directly into the vibrant, often disorienting dreamscape of early modernism. This painting, executed in 1928, is not merely a depiction of figures and objects; it is a carefully constructed intellectual puzzle, a visual dialogue between the corporeal and the conceptual. The composition immediately arrests the viewer with its arresting tableau: two figures positioned facing one another—one draped in the vulnerability of nudity on the left, the other clothed in fabric on the right. Their shared, unseen focus suggests a moment of profound, perhaps unsettling, mutual contemplation, inviting us to question what object or idea commands their collective gaze.
What elevates Craccae beyond simple portraiture is Picabia’s masterful deployment of symbolic detritus. Scattered throughout the scene are objects that seem plucked from disparate realities: a prominent clock near the top suggests the relentless, perhaps mocking, passage of time; a bowl rests quietly in the lower left corner, hinting at offerings or decay; and two distinct books anchor the composition on either side. These elements do not merely decorate the space; they participate in the narrative. In the vein of Surrealist thought, these objects gain an almost autonomous life, challenging the viewer to assign meaning where none is explicitly given. The juxtaposition of the naked form against the structured dress, framed by mechanical timepieces and literary artifacts, creates a tension between raw existence and cultural artifice.
Understanding this work requires an appreciation for Picabia’s restless genius. A polymath who navigated Cubism, Dada, and Surrealism, his career was defined by a refusal to settle into any single aesthetic cage. By 1928, he was deeply immersed in the currents of the subconscious mind, using art as a vehicle for philosophical inquiry rather than mere representation. The painting embodies this spirit—it is witty, intellectual, and slightly unsettling. It speaks to the anxieties of the post-war era, where established certainties regarding identity, time, and reality were crumbling under the weight of modern experience.
For the collector or designer seeking a piece with profound depth, Craccae offers unparalleled intellectual gravity. Its detailed execution allows it to function beautifully as a focal point in any sophisticated interior setting. The interplay between the soft flesh tones and the hard lines of the surrounding objects provides a rich textural contrast that catches the light. Owning a reproduction of this work is not simply acquiring art; it is curating a conversation piece—a tangible echo of artistic rebellion, inviting daily contemplation on the nature of perception itself.
1879 - 1953 , Frankrig
Fortæl os om dit projekt, og vores kunsteksperter vil give dig 3 personlige kunstforslag.
Vi kuraterer 3 valgmuligheder kun til dig – Gratis!