





391 Magazine Poster Collection - Plate 020
$25.00
Originally published 1917–1924. Reissued by Carthay Studio.
A printed provocation from the heart of the early avant-garde, 391 was the bastard child of modernism and mischief. Conceived by Francis Picabia and occasionally hijacked by his equally unhinged contemporaries, it spat out visual anarchy disguised as a magazine.
This poster series draws directly from its original pages—faithfully presented with all their peculiarities and defects intact. We haven’t cleaned them up. We haven’t made them behave. What you see is what they saw: Dada at its most deliciously defiant.
Reproduction & Materials • Museum-quality posters printed on thick matte paper.
• Paper Thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper Weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94% / ISO Brightness: 104%
• Paper Sourced From: Japan
Ideal for the visually literate. The delightfully disobedient. The archivally inclined.
This piece is printed just for you the moment you order. It takes a touch longer to arrive, but that’s the beauty of made-to-order: less waste, more intention. Consider it a small act of elegance in a world of excess.
A printed provocation from the heart of the early avant-garde, 391 was the bastard child of modernism and mischief. Conceived by Francis Picabia and occasionally hijacked by his equally unhinged contemporaries, it spat out visual anarchy disguised as a magazine.
This poster series draws directly from its original pages—faithfully presented with all their peculiarities and defects intact. We haven’t cleaned them up. We haven’t made them behave. What you see is what they saw: Dada at its most deliciously defiant.
Reproduction & Materials • Museum-quality posters printed on thick matte paper.
• Paper Thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper Weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94% / ISO Brightness: 104%
• Paper Sourced From: Japan
Ideal for the visually literate. The delightfully disobedient. The archivally inclined.
This piece is printed just for you the moment you order. It takes a touch longer to arrive, but that’s the beauty of made-to-order: less waste, more intention. Consider it a small act of elegance in a world of excess.
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Originally published 1917–1924. Reissued by Carthay Studio.
A printed provocation from the heart of the early avant-garde, 391 was the bastard child of modernism and mischief. Conceived by Francis Picabia and occasionally hijacked by his equally unhinged contemporaries, it spat out visual anarchy disguised as a magazine.
This poster series draws directly from its original pages—faithfully presented with all their peculiarities and defects intact. We haven’t cleaned them up. We haven’t made them behave. What you see is what they saw: Dada at its most deliciously defiant.
Reproduction & Materials • Museum-quality posters printed on thick matte paper.
• Paper Thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper Weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94% / ISO Brightness: 104%
• Paper Sourced From: Japan
Ideal for the visually literate. The delightfully disobedient. The archivally inclined.
This piece is printed just for you the moment you order. It takes a touch longer to arrive, but that’s the beauty of made-to-order: less waste, more intention. Consider it a small act of elegance in a world of excess.
A printed provocation from the heart of the early avant-garde, 391 was the bastard child of modernism and mischief. Conceived by Francis Picabia and occasionally hijacked by his equally unhinged contemporaries, it spat out visual anarchy disguised as a magazine.
This poster series draws directly from its original pages—faithfully presented with all their peculiarities and defects intact. We haven’t cleaned them up. We haven’t made them behave. What you see is what they saw: Dada at its most deliciously defiant.
Reproduction & Materials • Museum-quality posters printed on thick matte paper.
• Paper Thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper Weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94% / ISO Brightness: 104%
• Paper Sourced From: Japan
Ideal for the visually literate. The delightfully disobedient. The archivally inclined.
This piece is printed just for you the moment you order. It takes a touch longer to arrive, but that’s the beauty of made-to-order: less waste, more intention. Consider it a small act of elegance in a world of excess.
Originally published 1917–1924. Reissued by Carthay Studio.
A printed provocation from the heart of the early avant-garde, 391 was the bastard child of modernism and mischief. Conceived by Francis Picabia and occasionally hijacked by his equally unhinged contemporaries, it spat out visual anarchy disguised as a magazine.
This poster series draws directly from its original pages—faithfully presented with all their peculiarities and defects intact. We haven’t cleaned them up. We haven’t made them behave. What you see is what they saw: Dada at its most deliciously defiant.
Reproduction & Materials • Museum-quality posters printed on thick matte paper.
• Paper Thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper Weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94% / ISO Brightness: 104%
• Paper Sourced From: Japan
Ideal for the visually literate. The delightfully disobedient. The archivally inclined.
This piece is printed just for you the moment you order. It takes a touch longer to arrive, but that’s the beauty of made-to-order: less waste, more intention. Consider it a small act of elegance in a world of excess.
A printed provocation from the heart of the early avant-garde, 391 was the bastard child of modernism and mischief. Conceived by Francis Picabia and occasionally hijacked by his equally unhinged contemporaries, it spat out visual anarchy disguised as a magazine.
This poster series draws directly from its original pages—faithfully presented with all their peculiarities and defects intact. We haven’t cleaned them up. We haven’t made them behave. What you see is what they saw: Dada at its most deliciously defiant.
Reproduction & Materials • Museum-quality posters printed on thick matte paper.
• Paper Thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper Weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94% / ISO Brightness: 104%
• Paper Sourced From: Japan
Ideal for the visually literate. The delightfully disobedient. The archivally inclined.
This piece is printed just for you the moment you order. It takes a touch longer to arrive, but that’s the beauty of made-to-order: less waste, more intention. Consider it a small act of elegance in a world of excess.