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“Surrealism in the service of distraction” at the Gallery Raphaël Durazzo from September 26 to November 23 2024
Exhibition from September 26 to November 23, 2024
In partnership with the Centre PompidouFrom 26 September to 23 November, the Galerie Raphael Durazzo presents the exhibition ‘Surrealism in the service of Distraction’, curated by surrealism specialist Alyce Mahon. This is an exhibition dedicated to major surrealist women artists, notably Leonor Fini, Leonora Carrington and Dorothea Tanning, as well as their contemporary heirs Sarah Anstis, Piper Bangs and Ginny Casey, rethinks the status of the surrealist woman artist by following the thread that links the two generations. ‘Surrealism in the service of distraction’, is under the umbrella of the Centre Pompidou surrealist itinerary that will run from 4 September 2024 to 13 January 2025, where thirty-six galleries belonging to the Comité des Galeries d’art are expanding further the Centre Pompidou show with individual exhibitions celebrating the Centenary of Surrealism. This initiative aims to offer an unprecedented insight into the exceptional creative effervescence of the Surrealist movement, born in 1924 with the publication of André Breton’s founding Manifesto.
Dorothea Tanning, Chiens ombragés (dogs in the shade), 1959, 130 x 195 cmThe title of the exhibition alludes to the Surrealist magazine “Le Surréalisme au service de la revolution” (Surrealism in the service of Revolution) with the title Surrealism in the service of distraction. Dorothea Tanning (1910-2012), Leonor Fini (1907-1996) and Leonora Carrington (1917-2011) came to Surrealism not through artistic training but through discovery, recognizing in its texts and images a means of mastering their own ambitions as modern artists and women. Each played an essential role in the expansion of Surrealism beyond the first decades of experimentation through their work in oil painting, design, and sculpture.
Carrington, Fini and Tanning were recognized early on through their participation in major international exhibitions such as Alfred Barr’s Fantastic Art Dada Surrealism show at New York’s MoMA in 1936 or the Exposition Internationale du Surréalisme at the Galerie Maeght in Paris in 1947 as well as numerous later solo and collective exhibitions internationally. In their art, they dared to stage a surrealist vision of the world that empowered women.
In so doing, they challenged the social, moral and familial expectations of the world in which they were born in a proto-feminist way; their artistic vision transcended the studio and paved the way for younger generations to activate new images of the woman, liberated from the traditional role of muse and the ‘Other’.
Leonora Carrington, La Dragonesa, 2010, lost wax bronze, 44 x 26 x 29 cm, édition of 10, rossogranada/leonora Carrington Consejo
/ Leonor Fini, Visage imaginaire, circa 1960, watercolour on paper, 30 x 20 cm‘Surrealism in the service of Distraction’, features the erotic drawings of Fini alongside the kaleidoscopic landscapes of Tanning, and for the first time in France, the subversive and mythical sculptures of Leonora Carrington which show a creative freedom that unites the sensual and the fantastic in the surrealist spirit. Their shared sense of Surrealism will be presented as manifesting a new understanding of freedom for woman through the self-portrait, the abstract nude and the matriarchal image. This legacy emerges in the art of young contemporary artists selected for the show: Sara Anstis, Piper Bangs, and Ginny Casey. The work of ‘distraction’ is the very opposite of concentration – distraction ensures the viewer comes into dialogue with the work and encompasses it rather than being encompassed by it; in this way the artwork reshapes our world, distracting us from reality and rationalism. Together, the works on show in ‘Surrealism in the service of Distraction’do commemorate Surrealism, continuing its liberatory work as we mark the 100th anniversary of the first manifesto.
The exhibition is organised in collaboration with rossogranada, the exclusive representatives of the Leonora Carrington Council in Europe, Switzerland and the UK, and the Estate of Leonor Fini.
Leonor Fini, Mutant, circa 1970, Ink and watercolour on paper, 59 x 46 cm / Leonora Carrington, Cara Blanca, 2010, 925 sterling silver, 24-carat gold and precious stones, 4 x 5 x 0,4 cm, édition of 100, rossogranada/ Leonora Carrington CouncilAbout Alyce Mahon
Alyce Mahon is Professor of the History of Modern and Contemporary Art at the University of Cambridge. She is the author of Surrealism and the Politics of Eros, 1938-1968 (2005), Eroticism & Art (2007), The Marquis de Sade and the Avant-Garde (2020), and Dorothea Tanning: A Surrealist World (2024) and the edited catalogue Dorothea Tanning (2018), as well as numerous essays in journals, books and catalogues on Surrealist, avant-garde and feminist art. She was involved in the first major show of Carrington in Europe, Leonora Carrington: Celtic Surrealist (Irish Museum Modern Art, Dublin, 2013), she was curatorial advisor for the first major show of Fini in the US, Leonor Fini: Theatre of Desire 1930- 1990 at the Museum of Sex, New York (2018-2019) and she solo curated the first major retrospective of Dorothea Tanning for Madrid’s Museo Reina Sofia (2018-2019) and London’s Tate Modern (2019). More recently she was co-curator of SADE: Freedom or Evil for Barcelona’s CCCB in 2023. She is a frequent author of specialist catalogues for international exhibitions on Surrealism, the most recent of which are Surrealism. L’exposition du centenaire (1924-1969) (Centre Pompidou 2024-2025), Surrealism & Design Now: From Dalí to AI (Museum of Design, London, 2022-2023), The Milk of Dreams (59th Venice Biennale, 2022), Surrealism & Magic (Peggy Guggenheim, Venice & Barberini Museum Potsdam, 2022), Maria Martins: Desejo Imaginante (MASP, Sao Paulo, 2021), and Fantastic Women – Surreal Worlds (Schirn Kusnthalle, Frankfurt, and Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebæk, 2020).
About Galerie Raphaël Durazzo
Founded in April 2022 in Paris by Raphaël Durazzo, the Galerie Raphaël Durazzo (23 rue du Cirque – 75008 Paris) has chosen, out of passion, to defend the Avant-Garde currents of the 20th century. After starting his professional life in the banking sector, Raphaël Durazzo soon felt the need to live out his lifelong passion for art. He took online art history courses in the evenings, met collectors and brokers, and opened his own gallery in the former Pierre Cardin boutique in the 8th arrondissement, which has become a meeting place for the greatest collectors, both French and foreign.