2015-01-04

Exhibition dates: 19th October 2014 – 11th January 2015

The Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation Exhibition Hall

Love this period in photographic history and this type of work, love them all. Dora Maar your a star!

Marcus

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Many thankx to the Cleveland Museum of Art for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

“Often wild and recalcitrant, the images presented in Forbidden Games have been somewhat bridled by the curators who present them in broadly structured theme-based spaces. These categories include Advertising and the Picture Magazine, Collage, City, Natural World, Body, Mannequin, Night Life, and Abstraction. The curatorial rubrics guide the visitor through the exhibition and ease the appreciation of “the eye in its wild state” (l’oeil à l’état sauvage), the museum’s declared leitmotif for the show. Three additional spaces highlight the work of individual artists Marcel Lefranq (1916-1974), Georges Hugnet (1906-1974), and Dora Maar (1907-1997)…

It is not difficult to engage in a personal way with a number of photographs in this exhibition. In sharp contrast to the monumental scale of many late twentieth-century and millennial museum photographs, which often seem designed to engulf and visually overwhelm the viewer, these comparatively ‘small scale’ works radiate a quiet integrity often lacking in the former. The photographs on view are powerful, yet neither dominate the room nor repel the viewer. Instead, and refreshingly so, they are the whispered testimonial of artists who practiced unhurried looking and seeing. These images must be approached without haste; only then, do they yield their subtle beauty and secrets.”

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Julie Nero, from her excellent review “Forbidden Games: Surrealist and Modern Photography” on the ArtHopper website

Anton Stankowski (German, 1906-1998)
Photo Eye (Foto-Auge)
1927, printed 1938-40

Gelatin silver print, montage, from negatives with handwork

10.9 x 14.5 cm

The Cleveland Museum of Art, John L. Severance Fund 2007.122

© Stankowski-Stiftung

Jacques-Henri Lartigue (French, 1894-1986)
The Crystal Ball (La Boule de Verre)
1931

Gelatin silver print, toned

23.7 x 29.9 cm

The Cleveland Museum of Art, John L. Severance Fund 2007.149

© Ministère de la Culture – France / AAJHL

Raoul Ubac (Belgian, 1910-1985)
The Battle of the Penthesilea (Le Combat des Penthésiliées)
1937

Gelatin silver print

16.9 x 22.8 cm

The Cleveland Museum of Art, John L. Severance Fund 2007.154

© 2013 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris

Man Ray
Emak Bakia

1926

Photo of collector, David Raymond
Photo credit: Elena Dorfman

“The Cleveland Museum of Art presents Forbidden Games: Surrealist and Modernist Photography, a fascinatingly varied group of over 160 surrealist and modernist photographs from the 1920s through the 1940s. The exhibition and accompanying catalogue of the extraordinary vintage prints, acquired by the museum in 2007-2008 from the renowned collection of filmmaker David Raymond, represent the collection’s first appearance in print or at a museum. The exhibition will also include six short films and two books. Forbidden Games will be on view at the Cleveland Museum of Art from October 19, 2014, through January 11, 2015.

Through 167 photographs and illustrated books, the Raymond collection tells two stories: one of a radical moment in early twentieth-century art and the other of an impassioned collector whose adventurous spirit and vision harmonized perfectly with his subject. Beginning in the 1990s, art collector and filmmaker David Raymond judiciously sought out vintage prints from the 1920s through the 1940s that reflect the eye in its wild state (l’oeil a l’état sauvage), remaining true to the spirit of André Breton, a founder of surrealism. Raymond’s holdings of surrealist and modernist photography were distinguished by their quality, breadth, and rarity of subject matter. In 2007, the Cleveland Museum of Art made a major, transformative acquisition by procuring that collection, one of the most important holdings of twentieth-century surrealist photography that remained in private hands.

Vertiginous camera angles, odd croppings, and exaggerated tones and perspectives are hallmarks of the two principal photographic movements of the period, surrealism and modernism. As with surrealist efforts in other media, artists making photographs also aimed to explore the irrational and the chance encounter – magic and the mundane – filtered through the unconscious defined by Sigmund Freud. Eventually, photography became a preeminent tool of surrealist visual culture.

Artists from fourteen countries, representing diverse artistic pathways and divergent attitudes toward photography, come together in this collection. Many of the photographs reflect Parisian circles, with masterful works by Man Ray, Brassaï, Maurice Tabard, and Roger Parry. Soviet Russia is represented by Alexander Rodchenko and El Lissitzky; Germany by László Moholy-Nagy and Erwin Blumenfeld, among others. In addition to these notable artists, the collection features many photographers whose work is not as well known in the United States, including Horacio Coppola of Argentina, Emiel van Moerkerken of Holland, and Marcel-G. Lefrancq of Belgium. A highlight of the collection is a grouping of 23 works by Dora Maar, a female photographer with a strong voice in surrealist Paris.

“We are proud to celebrate this important acquisition with the first in-depth examination of a segment of our increasingly important collection of photography,” said Dr. William M. Griswold, museum director. “David Raymond is a judicious and passionate collector who assembled his collection with astute judgment and connoisseurship, seeking out works that reflect l’oeil à l’état sauvage – the eye in its wild state, a tenet of surrealism supplied by André Breton, founder of the first surrealist group in Paris.”

“The Cleveland Museum of Art made a major, transformative acquisition by procuring the David Raymond collection, one of the most important holdings of twentieth-century surrealist photography that remained in private hands,” said Barbara Tannenbaum, the museum’s curator of photography. “Forbidden Games offers the public its first chance to view Raymond’s collection and through it, to vicariously experience an exhilarating, sometimes harrowing period of revolutionary social and cultural change.”

Forbidden Games is accompanied by a 240-page catalogue by Tom Hinson, curator emeritus, who tells the story of how the collection came to the museum and discusses the philosophy and the psychology behind Raymond’s collecting style; photo historian Ian Walker of the University of South Wales, who sets the photographs into historical and historiographic contexts; and independent curator Lisa Kurzner, who delves into topics of special interest ranging from examinations of techniques such as photograms and photo collage to explications of the symbolism of the mannequin and biographical studies of Maar and Hugnet. The catalogue, distributed by Yale University Press, is available for purchase at the museum or online: store.cmastore.org/fogasuandmop.html (Hard cover/$39.95, soft cover/$29.95.)

This exhibition is supported by a grant from the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation and was developed in part through the generosity of Mark Schwartz and Bettina Katz. The Cleveland Museum of Art is generously funded by Cuyahoga County residents through Cuyahoga Arts and Culture. The Ohio Arts Council helped fund this exhibition with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence, and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans.”

Text from the Cleveland Museum of Art website

Raoul Ubac
Mannequin d’Andre Masson

1938

Photographed by Raoul Ubac, André Masson’s Mannequin (1938) was one of sixteen artist-decorated dress-shop dummies on view at the 1938 Paris Exposition Internationale du Surréalisme. Probably the most well-known mannequin of the infamous installation, the head of Masson’s dummy is framed in a wicker bird-cage. Nearby, in the same area devoted to the “Mannequin,” a theme addressed ubiquitously in countless surrealist works, Hans Bellmer’s dismembered Poupée (1936) is on view. While both works symbolically objectify and victimize the female ‘body,’ Bellmer’s disturbing Poupée, unlike Masson’s somewhat playful Mannequin, darkly insinuates sexual torture and murder. (Text by Julie Nero)

Erwin Blumenfeld
Boxers over New York
1920

Photomontage

A 1920 photo-collage of boxers fighting over New York, an aerial shot of the city overlaid with silver print cut-outs of Jack Johnson and Jim Jeffries, the Great White Hope, duking it out like gods in the sky. It was made by Erwin Blumenfeld, who signed the work Blumenfeldada. (Many of these artists cut and pasted their names as readily as they cut and pasted images.) (Text by Sarah Boxer)

François Kollar (Slovak, 1904-1979)
Wood-Milne
1930

Gelatin silver print, montage

37.5 x 28.1 cm

The Cleveland Museum of Art, John L. Severance Fund 2007.58

© Ministère de la Culture / Médiathèque du Patrimoine, Dist. RMN

Edward Quigley (American, 1898-1977)
Photogram (Number 9)
1931

Gelatin silver print, photogram

20.7 x 16.6 cm

The Cleveland Museum of Art, John L. Severance Fund 2007.110

Thurman Rotan (American, 1903-1991)
New York Montage
1928

Gelatin silver print, montage

11.5 x 8.2 cm

The Cleveland Museum of Art, John L. Severance Fund 2007.117

Dora Maar (French, 1907-1997)
Double Portrait with Hat
c. 1936-37

Gelatin silver print, montage, from negatives with handwork

29.7 x 23.8 cm

The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of David Raymond 2008.172

© 2013 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP

In Double Portrait with Hat(1936-37), Dora Maar radically altered and reconfigured photographic materials to generate an image. In her quietly gripping self-portrait, Maar cut and scraped directly into two negatives to create a heavy and forbidding halo above a torn and divided self. Works such as these… explore the formal definition and limits of photographic ‘content’ and anticipate the experiments of non-narrative filmmakers Stan Brakhage and Jonas Mekas of the 1960s and 1970s. (Text by Julie Nero)

Dora Maar (French, 1907-1997)
Mendiant aveugle (Blind Beggar)

1934

Vintage gelatin silver print
30 x 23.9 cm

The Second Spanish Republic fascinated many of the photographers active in the international context during the first half of the 20th century, such as Henri Cartier-Bresson, Man Ray and Dora Maar. The latter travelled to Barcelona in the summer of 1933; there, imbued with the spirit of the flâneur (Baudelaire’s stroller looking for chance encounters), she wandered through the city taking photographs of anonymous characters. In Mendiant aveugle (Blind Beggar), Dora Maar felt drawn to blindness, a motif that had been recurrent in photography from its very beginnings, because of the paradox of capturing the image of someone who cannot see. Dora Maar plays a game that is both conceptual and aesthetic, by combining elements that seek symbolic efficacy, in harmony with the interests of Surrealism: the subject’s open eyes, which preserve the gesture of seeing but not the sense of sight, the mysterious wrapped object the beggar is holding in his lap (probably a stringed instrument) and the lowered metallic blinds that serve as a backdrop to the character’s drama. This image is evidence of the affinity that Dora Maar felt with the surrealist group; in the opinion of its early theorists, André Breton and Paul Éluard, artists should “train one’s eyes by closing them” in order to shape their gaze and direct it towards the alternative reality associated with the unconscious mind.

Almudena Cruz Yábar

Dora Maar (French, 1907-1997)
Jeux interdits (Forbidden Games)

1935

Photomontage

Brassaï (French, 1899-1984)
Young Couple Wearing a Two-in-One Suit at the Bal de la Montagne Sainte-Geneviève
1931

Gelatin silver print, ferrotyped

29.8 x 22 cm

The Cleveland Museum of Art, John L. Severance Fund 2007.40

© The Brassaï Estate – RMN

Georges Hugnet (French, 1906-1974)
The Architect of Magus
1935

Collage; photomechanical reproductions on drawing (graphite, watercolor, black pen, and ink)

31.3 x 22.7 cm

The Cleveland Museum of Art, John L. Severance Fund 2007.53

© 2013 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris

Hans Bellmer (German, 1902-1975)

The Doll (La Poupée)
1936

Gelatin silver print

11.7 x 7.8 cm

The Cleveland Museum of Art,  John L. Severance Fund 2007.27

© 2013 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.

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Filed under: American, american photographers, black and white photography, exhibition, existence, gallery website, intimacy, light, memory, photographic series, photography, portrait, reality, space, surrealism, time, works on paper Tagged: American surrealism, André Breton, Anton Stankowski, Anton Stankowski Foto-Auge, Anton Stankowski Photo Eye, Blind Beggar, Boxers over New York, Brassaï Young Couple Wearing a Two-in-One Suit, Brassai, Dora Maar, Dora Maar Blind Beggar, Dora Maar Double Portrait with Hat, Dora Maar Forbidden Games, Dora Maar Jeux interdits, Dora Maar Mendiant aveugle, Double Portrait with Hat, Edward Quigley, Edward Quigley Photogram, Edward Quigley Photogram (Number 9), Emak Bakia, Erwin Blumenfeld, Erwin Blumenfeld Boxers over New York, European surrealism, Exposition Internationale du Surréalisme, Forbidden Games, Forbidden Games: Surrealist and Modernist Photography, François Kollar, François Kollar Wood-Milne, Georges Hugnet, Georges Hugnet The Architect of Magus, Hans Bellmer, Hans Bellmer La Poupée, Hans Bellmer The Doll, Jacques Henri Lartigue, Jacques-Henri Lartigue The Crystal Ball, Jeux interdits, l'oeil a l'état sauvage, La Boule de Verre, La Poupée, Lartigue La Boule de Verre, Lartigue The Crystal Ball, Le Combat des Penthésiliées, Man Ray, Man Ray Emak Bakia, Mannequin, Mannequin d'Andre Masson, Mendiant aveugle, modernism, Modernist Photography, New York Montage, photomontage, Raoul Ubac, Raoul Ubac Mannequin, Raoul Ubac Mannequin d'Andre Masson, Raoul Ubac Penthesilea, surrealism, Surrealist and Modernist Photography, surrealist photography, surrealist visual culture, The Architect of Magus, The Battle of the Penthesilea, The Crystal Ball, The Doll, the eye in its wild state, Thurman Rotan, Thurman Rotan New York Montage, Ubac Le Combat des Penthésiliées, Ubac The Battle of the Penthesilea, Wood-Milne, Young Couple Wearing a Two-in-One Suit

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