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自画像

Leonora Carrington Mexican, born England
ca. 1937–38
Not on view
在这幅自画像中,艺术家炫耀着她的白色骑马裤、维多利亚风格的靴子、海草绿夹克衫和一头蓬乱的头发。卡琳顿孤身一人处在这个令人捉摸不透的房间里,坐在蓝色的扶手椅上,唯一陪伴她的就是一只昂首阔步的土狼,它有三个松垂的乳房。巨大的白色摇摆木马和它的阴影似乎是画在墙壁上的。透过有黄色窗帘装饰的窗户看到的风景里有另一匹身形较小的马。画中奇怪的角色选择可能出自卡琳顿同一时期某个极其怪诞的短篇小说。

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 标题: 自画像
  • 艺术家: 利奥诺拉·卡琳顿,墨西哥,出生于英格兰,1917–2011年
  • 创作日期: 约1937–38年
  • 材料: 布面油画
  • 尺寸: 255⁄8 x 32英寸(65 x 81.3厘米)
  • 来源信息: 皮埃尔和玛丽亚-加埃塔纳·马蒂斯收藏,2002年
  • 藏品编号: 2002.456.1
  • Curatorial Department: Modern and Contemporary Art

Audio

仅适用于: English
Cover Image for Leonora Carrington’s *Self Portrait* | Gallery 901

Leonora Carrington’s Self Portrait | Gallery 901

“I didn’t have time to be anyone’s muse,” the artist and writer Leonora Carrington once said. “I was too busy rebelling against my family and learning to be an artist.”

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KATY HESSEL (Voiceover): In The Met’s Modern and Contemporary Wing, there’s a small self-portrait of a woman with wild hair. This woman is surrealist artist Leonora Carrington. And when I saw this incredible work in person, I was astonished.

HESSEL: Ah… amazing!

I’ve seen it reproduced so many times. But actually when you see it in The Met Museum, somehow it comes alive more than you’ve ever imagined before.

We see this woman, her hair almost looks like it’s got a sort of electric shock or something. She’s wearing these white jodhpurs. It’s quite preppy. And these two horses, one of which is a flying rocking horse with a shadow—looking quite ominous. And the other is breaking free, it’s alive. It’s not a rocking horse. It’s not wooden. It’s set free into the distance.

Leonora Carrington is just an artist who I’ve always, her work has always resonated with me so much. And it’s because she had this rebellious, free spirit. She had such an extraordinary life. She grew up in this quite strict, sort of upper-middle-class household where she was destined to just be a debutante and essentially be married off to a wealthy man.

But she did the exact opposite of that. She ran away to London, and then to Paris, then she went to Spain and then New York, then Mexico City. And she was young at this time. She was twenty years old when she made her Self-Portrait. And she’d just run away.

HESSEL (Voiceover): For a long time, rather than being known as an artist in her own right, Leonora Carrington was widely known as Max Ernst’s muse. Max Ernst was one of the most well-known artists from the surrealist movement of the early twentieth century.

HESSEL: And I always get so frustrated when I go to exhibitions and I look at the wall text and they say, “Oh, Leonora Carrington, her lover was Max Ernst.” Well, she was also so much more than that. And should women be considered muses? Yes, that might be an element of what they do. They might be a subject, which is an exciting, interesting aspect of their career. But also they were artists first and foremost.

And actually, I love this quote… So when Whitney Chadwick, who’s a formidable, brilliant feminist art historian, asked artist Leonora Carrington for her thoughts on the surrealist muse, she replied, “I thought it was bullshit. I didn’t have time to be anyone’s muse. I was too busy rebelling against my family and learning to be an artist.”

HESSEL (Voiceover): Listen on to hear more incredible stories about women artists at The Met.

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