•
February 20 –
Filippo Tommaso Marinetti's
Futurist Manifesto is first published, in the French newspaper
Le Figaro. • May–June –
Claude Monet's
Water Lilies series of paintings are first exhibited, at
Paul Durand-Ruel's gallery in Paris. •
July 22 – Widowed
Irish-born painter
John Lavery marries
Irish American painter
Hazel Martyn. •
Guillaume Apollinaire's first book of poetry is illustrated with
woodcuts by
André Derain. •
Léon Bakst begins painting scenery for
Sergei Diaghilev's
Ballets Russes, beginning with
Cleopatra. •
Robert Delaunay begins painting his
Saint-Sévrin,
City and
Eiffel Tower series. •
Lithuanian Jewish sculptor
Jacques Lipchitz moves to Paris to study and work. •
Pablo Picasso and
Georges Braque create the first works of
analytical cubism. •
Sonderbund westdeutscher Kunstfreunde und Künstler established in
Düsseldorf. •
Kunsthalle Mannheim established as a permanent art gallery. •
Reformation Wall created in
Geneva by
Swiss architects Charles Dubois,
Alphonse Laverrière,
Eugène Monod and Jean Taillens with figures by
French sculptors
Paul Landowski and
Henri Bouchard. are statues of
William Farel,
John Calvin,
Theodore Beza and
John Knox •
Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky is commissioned by
Nicholas II of Russia to begin a record in
color photography of his empire. •
Henri Gaudier meets
Sophie Brzeska at the
Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève in
Paris. •
Hugo von Tschudi loans
Paul Gauguin's painting
Te tamari no atua (1896) to the
Alte Nationalgalerie in Berlin, of which he is Director. This causes his immediate dismissal by Kaiser
Wilhelm II and he moves to become Director of the
Neue Pinakothek in
Munich (Bavaria), taking the painting with him. •
Wilhelm von Bode purchases the wax bust
Flora cheaply from a London dealer for the
Kaiser Friedrich Museum in Berlin, believing it to be by
Leonardo da Vinci. It is subsequently shown to be early 19th century English, probably by
Richard Cockle Lucas. ==Works==