Australian feminist comedian Hannah Gadsby has been roasted by art critics after launching her 'It's Pablo-matic: Picasso According to Hannah Gadsby' exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum in New York City.
The art show features more than 100 works, actual news including pieces by Picasso and by modern female artists, as well as audio descriptions by Gadsby herself.
An official press release says the exhibition 'reckons with complex questions around misogyny, creativity, the art-historical canon, and "genius"'.
A promo video shows Gadsby strolling through the museum as she refers to Picasso as a 'misogynist' whose life needs to be viewed through the fresh lens of feminism.
However, the exhibition has left many unimpressed with critic Jason Farago writing: 'The ambitions here are at GIF level, though perhaps that's the point.'
Australian comedian Hannah Gadsby (pictured) has been roasted by art critics after launching her own 'Picasso' exhibition in the U.S.
The art show features more than 100 works, including pieces by Picasso (pictured) and by modern female artists, as well as audio descriptions by Gadsby herself
Farago also criticised the variety of artists displayed, adding: 'The female artists featured do not include female Cubists, women inspired by Picasso, or the female artists Picasso was actually involved with in his life.'
Meanwhile, Adlan Jackson's review for was bluntly headlined: 'Don't Go to It's Pablo-matic.'
It comes after it was revealed Gadsby slammed comedy legend , five years before his death.
'That's not a comedian, that's an irrelevant, inhumane d**k biscuit of the highest order.'