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                   François
                  Marie Martinez Picabia was born on or about January 22, 1879,
                  in Paris, of a Spanish father and a French mother. He was
                  enrolled at the Ecole des Arts Décoratifs in Paris from 1895
                  to 1897 and later studied with Fernand Cormon, Ferdinand
                  Humbert, and Albert Charles Wallet. He began to paint in an
                  Impressionist manner in the winter of 1902-03 and started to
                  exhibit works in this style at the Salon d'Automne and the
                  Salon des Indépendants of 1903.  His
                  first solo show was held at the Galerie Haussmann, Paris, in
                  1905. From 1908 elements of Fauvism and Neo-Impressionism as
                  well as Cubism and other forms of abstraction appeared in his
                  painting, and by 1912 he had evolved a personal amalgam of
                  Cubism and Fauvism. Picabia worked in an abstract mode from
                  this period until the early 1920s. Picabia became a friend of
                  Guillaume Apollinaire and Marcel Duchamp and associated with
                  the Puteaux group in 1911 and 1912. He participated in the
                  1913 Armory Show, visiting New York on this occasion and
                  frequenting avant-garde circles. Alfred Stieglitz: gave him a
                  solo exhibition at his gallery "291" that same year.
                  in 1915, which marked the beginning of Picabia's machinist or
                  mechanomorphic period, he and Duchamp, among others,
                  instigated and participated in Dada manifestations in New
                  York. 
                  
 Picabia
                  lived in Barcelona in 1916 and 1917; in 1917 he published his
                  first volume of poetry and the first issues of 391, his
                  magazine modeled after Stieglitz's periodical 291. For
                  the next few years Picabia remained involved with the Dadaists
                  in Zurich and Paris, creating scandals at the Salon d'Automne,
                  but finally denounced Dada in 1921 for no longer being
                  "new." He moved to Tremblay-sur-Mauldre, outside of
                  Paris, in 1922 and returned to figurative art. In 1924 he
                  attacked André Breton and the Surrealists in 391.  Picabia
                  moved to Mougins in 1925. During the 1930s he became a close
                  friend of Gertrude Stein. By the end of World War II Picabia
                  returned to Paris. He resumed painting in an abstract style
                  and writing poetry. In March 1949 a retrospective of his work
                  was held at the Galerie René Drouin in Paris. Picabia died in
                  Paris on November 30, 1953.
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