Mary Leonora CarringtonOBE (6 April 1917 – 25 May 2011[1]) was a British-born
surrealist painter and novelist. She lived most of her adult life in
Mexico City and was one of the last surviving participants in the surrealist movement of the 1930s.[2] Carrington was also a founding member of the
women's liberation movement in Mexico during the 1970s.[3][4]
Early life
Mary Leonora Carrington was born at Westwood House in
Clayton Green,[5][6][7] England, into a Roman Catholic family.[8] Her father, Harold Wylde Carrington, was a wealthy textile manufacturer,[6][9] and her mother, Marie (née Moorhead), was from Ireland.[10][6] She had three brothers: Patrick, Gerald, and Arthur.[11][12] From 1920 until 1927 she lived at Crookhey Hall, a
Gothic Revival mansion in
Cockerham, which exerted a great influence on her imagination.[11]
Educated by governesses, tutors, and nuns, she was expelled from two schools, including
New Hall School in
Chelmsford[13] for her rebellious behaviour, until her family sent her to
Florence, where she attended Mrs Penrose's Academy of Art. She also, briefly, attended St Mary's convent school in Ascot.[14] In 1927, at the age of ten, she saw her first Surrealist painting in a
Left Bank gallery in Paris and later met many Surrealists, including
Paul Éluard.[15] Her father opposed her career as an artist, but her mother encouraged her. She returned to England and was
presented at Court, but according to her, because she had no intention of being "sold to the highest bidder" she brought a copy of
Aldous Huxley's Eyeless in Gaza (1936) to read instead.[11] In 1935, she attended the
Chelsea School of Art in London for one year, and with the help of her father's friend
Serge Chermayeff, she was able to transfer to the
Ozenfant Academy of Fine Arts established by the French modernist
Amédée Ozenfant in London (1936–38).[11][16]
She became familiar with
Surrealism from a copy of
Herbert Read's book, Surrealism (1936), given to her by her mother,[12] but she received little encouragement from her family to forge an artistic career. The
Surrealist poet and patron
Edward James was the champion of her work in Britain; James bought many of her paintings and arranged a show in 1947 for her work at the
Pierre Matisse Gallery in New York. Some works are still hanging at James' former family home, currently
West Dean College in
West Dean, West Sussex.[17]
Association with Max Ernst
In 1936 Carrington saw the work of the German
surrealistMax Ernst at the
International Surrealist Exhibition in London and was attracted to the Surrealist artist before she even met him. In 1937 Carrington met Ernst at a party held in London.[18]: 44 The artists bonded and returned together to Paris, where Ernst promptly separated from his wife. In 1938 they left Paris and settled in
Saint Martin d'Ardèche in southern France. The new couple collaborated and supported each other's artistic development. The two artists created sculptures of guardian animals (Carrington created a plaster horse head, while Ernst created his birds) to decorate their home in Saint Martin d'Ardèche. In 1939 Carrington and Ernst painted portraits of each other. Both capture the ambivalence in their relationship, but whereas Ernst's The Triumph of Love features both artists in the composition,[19] Carrington's Portrait of Max Ernst focused solely on Ernst and is laced with heavy symbolisms.[11] The portrait was not her first Surrealist work; between 1937 and 1938 Carrington painted
Self-Portrait, also called The Inn of the Dawn Horse, now exhibited at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. Sporting white jodhpurs and a wild mane of hair, Carrington is perched on the edge of a chair in this curious, dreamlike scene, her hand outstretched toward a prancing hyena and her back to a tailless rocking horse flying behind her.
With the outbreak of World War II Ernst, who was German, was arrested by the French authorities for being a "hostile alien". With the intercession of
Paul Éluard, and other friends, including the American journalist
Varian Fry, he was discharged a few weeks later. Soon after the Nazis invaded France, Ernst was arrested again, this time by the
Gestapo, because his art was considered by the Nazis to be "
degenerate". He managed to escape and flee to the United States with the help of
Peggy Guggenheim, who was a sponsor of the arts.[20]
After Ernst's arrest Carrington was devastated and agreed to go to Spain with a friend, Catherine Yarrow.[21] She stayed with family friends in Madrid until her paralyzing anxiety and delusions led to a psychotic break and she was admitted into an asylum. She was given
electroconvulsive therapy and was treated with the drugs
Cardiazol (a powerful
convulsant), and
Luminal (a
barbiturate).[22][23] She was released from the asylum into the care of a keeper, and was told that her parents had decided to send her to a sanatorium in South Africa. En route to South Africa, she stopped in Portugal, where she made her escape. She went to the Mexican Embassy to find
Renato Leduc, a poet and the Mexican Ambassador. Leduc was a friend of
Pablo Picasso (they knew each other from bull fights) and agreed to a marriage of convenience with Carrington so that she would be accorded the immunity given to a diplomat's wife.[24] The pair divorced in 1943.[24] Meanwhile, Ernst had married Peggy Guggenheim in New York in 1941. That marriage ended a few years later. Ernst and Carrington never resumed their relationship.
Mexico
After spending a year in New York, Leduc and Carrington went to Mexico, where many European artists fled in search of asylum, in 1942, which she grew to love and where she lived, on and off, for the rest of her life.[24]
When Carrington first came to Mexico she was preceded by the success of surrealist exhibitions which allowed her to create many connections within the surrealist movement. Her connections within these surrealist circles were influential in opening artistic doors that had long been closed to Mexican artists. After living in Mexico for seven years, Leonora Carrington held her first solo exhibition at the Galeria Clardecor. Much of the initial response from the public was very encouraging, and for months afterwards the press published positive and approving critic reviews.[26]
After spending part of the 1960s in New York City, Carrington lived and worked in Mexico once again.[7] While in Mexico she was asked, in 1963, to create a mural which she named El Mundo Magico de los Mayas,[27] and which was influenced by folk stories from the region.[28] The mural is now located in the
Museo Nacional de Antropología in
Mexico City.
In 1973 Carrington designed Mujeres conciencia, a poster for the Women's Liberation movement in Mexico, depicting a 'new Eve'. [29] In the 1970s women artists of previous waves and generations responded to the more liberal climate and movement of the array of feminist waves. Many pushed the issues of women's liberation and consciousness within their work while others spoke out on issues instead of making art.[29] She frequently spoke about women's "legendary powers" and the need for women to take back "the rights that belonged to them." Many artists involved in the Surrealism regarded women to be useful as muses but not seen as artists in their own right. Carrington was adopted as a femme-enfant by the Surrealists because of her rebelliousness against her upper-class upbringing.[30]
Carrington primarily focused on psychic freedom in the belief that such freedom cannot be achieved until political freedom is also accomplished.[3] Through these beliefs Carrington understood that "greater cooperation and sharing of knowledge between politically active women in Mexico and North America" was important for emancipation.[3] Carrington's political commitment led to her winning the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Women's Caucus for Art convention in New York in 1986.[3] Throughout the decade women identified and defined an array of relationships to feminist and mainstream concepts and concerns. Continuing through the decade women continued to question the meaning of existence through form and material.[29]
I didn't have time to be anyone's muse... I was too busy rebelling against my family and learning to be an artist.
She later married Emerico Weisz (nicknamed "Chiki"), born in Hungary in 1911, a photographer and the darkroom manager for
Robert Capa during the
Spanish Civil War. Together they had two sons: Gabriel, an intellectual and poet, and Pablo, a doctor and Surrealist artist. Chiki Weisz died 17 January 2007, at home. He was 97 years old.
Death
Leonora Carrington died on 25 May 2011, aged 94, in a hospital in Mexico City as a result of complications arising from
pneumonia.[32][33] Her remains were buried at
Panteón Inglés (English Cemetery) in Mexico City.[34]
Themes and major works
Carrington stated that: "I painted for myself...I never believed anyone would exhibit or buy my work."[3] She was not interested in the writings of
Sigmund Freud, as were other Surrealists in the movement. She instead focused on magical realism and alchemy and used autobiographical detail and symbolism as the subjects of her paintings. Carrington was interested in presenting female sexuality as she experienced it, rather than as that of male surrealists' characterization of female sexuality.[29] Carrington's work of the 1940s is focused on the underlying theme of women's role in the creative process.[3]
Carrington's work is identified and compared with the surrealist movement. Within the surrealist movement, there was a strong exploration of the woman's body combined with the mysterious forces of nature. During this time women artists correlated the feminine figure with creative nature while using ironic stances.[35]
When painting, she used small brushstroke techniques building up layers in a meticulous manner, creating rich imagery.
In Self-Portrait (Inn of the Dawn Horse) (1937-38), Carrington reflects on her own identity, associating herself with both the horse and hyena.[36] She offers her own interpretation of female sexuality by looking toward her own sexual reality rather than theorizing on the subject, as was custom by other Surrealists in the movement. Carrington's move away from the characterization of female sexuality subverted the traditional male role of the Surrealist movement. Self-Portrait (1937–38) also offers insight into Carrington's interest in the "alchemical transformation of matter and her response to the Surrealist cult of desire as a source of creative inspiration."[3]Self Portrait further explores the duality that comes with being a woman. This concept of duality is explored by Carrington using a mirror to assert duality of the self and the self being an observer with being observed.[37] The hyena depicted in Self-Portrait (1937–38) joins both male and female into a whole, metaphoric of the worlds of the night and the dream.[3] The symbol of the hyena is present in many of Carrington's later works, including "La Debutante" in her book of short stories The Oval Lady.[38]
Three years after being released from the asylum and with the encouragement of
André Breton,[39]Carrington wrote about her
psychotic experience in her memoir Down Below.[40] In this, she explained how she had a nervous breakdown, didn't want to eat, and left Spain. This is where she was imprisoned in an asylum. She illustrates all that was done to her: ruthless institutional therapies, sexual assault, hallucinatory drugs, and unsanitary conditions. It has been suggested that the events of the book should not be taken literally, given Carrington's state at the time of her institutionalization; however, recent authors have sought to examine the details of her institution in order to discredit this theory.[41][42] She also created art to depict her experience, such as her Portrait of Dr. Morales and Map of Down Below.[43]
Her book The Hearing Trumpet deals with aging and the female body. It follows the story of older women who, in the words of Madeleine Cottenet-Hage in her essay "The Body Subversive: Corporeal Imagery in Carrington, Prassinos and Mansour", seek to destroy the institutions of their imaginative society to usher in a "spirit of sisterhood."[44][45]: 86–87 The Hearing Trumpet also criticizes the shaming of the nude female body, and it is believed to be one of the first books to tackle the notion of
gender identity in the twentieth century.[45] Carrington's views situated motherhood as a key experience to femininity. Carrington stated, "We, women, are animals conditioned by maternity.... For female animals love-making, which is followed by the great drama of the birth of a new animal, pushes us into the depths of the biological cave." While this may seem to differ from certain modern feminist perspectives, the cave, of which Carrington offers many versions, is the setting for a symbolic coming to life, not an actual birth-giving ("and this can mean aquatic or maternal, this can be double, in my opinion"; mère and mer, following Simone de Beauvoir).[46]
Carrington had an interest in animals, myth, and symbolism. This interest became stronger after she moved to Mexico and started a relationship with the émigré Spanish artist
Remedios Varo. The two studied
alchemy, the
kabbalah, and the post-classic Mayan mystical writings, Popol Vuh.[47][48]
The first important exhibition of her work appeared in 1947 at the
Pierre Matisse Gallery in New York City. Carrington was invited to show her work in an international exhibition of Surrealism, where she was the only female English professional painter. She became a celebrity almost overnight. In Mexico, she authored and successfully published several books.[49]
The first major exhibition of her work in UK for twenty years took place at
Chichester's
Pallant House Gallery, West Sussex, from 17 June to 12 September 2010, and subsequently in
Norwich at the
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, as part of a season of major international exhibitions called Surreal Friends that celebrated women's role in the Surrealist movement. Her work was exhibited alongside pieces by her close friends, the Spanish painter
Remedios Varo (1908–1963) and the
Hungarian photographer
Kati Horna (1912–2000).[50]: 131
In 2013 Carrington was the subject of a major retrospective at the
Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin. Titled The Celtic Surrealist, it was curated by Sean Kissane and examined Carrington's Irish background to illuminate many cultural, political and mythological themes present in her work.[51]
Carrington's art often depicts horses, as in her Self-Portrait (Inn of the Dawn Horse) and the painting The Horses of Lord Candlestick.[11] Her fascination with drawing horses began in her childhood.[11] Horses also appear in her writings. In her first published short story, "The House of Fear", Carrington portrays a horse in the role of a psychic guide to a young heroine.[52] In 1935, Carrington's first essay, "Jezzamathatics or Introduction to the Wonderful Process of Painting", was published before her story "The Seventh Horse".[11] Carrington often used codes of words to dictate interpretation in her artwork. "Candlestick" is a code that she commonly used to represent her family, and the word "lord" for her father.[11]
In 2005
Christie's auctioned Carrington's Juggler (El Juglar),[53] and the realised price was US$713,000, setting a new record for the highest price paid at auction for a living surrealist painter. Carrington painted portraits of the telenovela actor
Enrique Álvarez Félix,[54][55] son of actress
María Félix, a friend of Carrington's first husband.
Carrington is credited with feminising surrealism. Her paintings and writing brought a woman's perspective to what had otherwise been a largely male-dominated artistic movement. Carrington demonstrated that women should be seen as artists in their own right and not to be used as muses by male artists.[58][59]
In 2022, the
Venice Biennale 59th International Art Exhibition was titled The Milk of Dreams. This name is borrowed from a book by Carrington, in which, the Italian curator
Cecilia Alemani says she, "describes a magical world where life is constantly re-envisioned through the prism of the imagination, and where everyone can change, be transformed, become something and someone else."[60]
Carrington's life inspired Out of This World: The Surreal Art of Leonora Carrington, a children's nonfiction book written by Michelle Markell and illustrated by
Amanda Hall and which tells the story of Carrington's life and art as she pursues her creative talents and breaks with 20-century conventions about the ways in which an upper-class women and debutants should behave.[61]
Carrington and her son were the subject of the experimental short film Leonora and Gabriel: An Instant. The film was made by
Lizet Benrey at Carrington's residence in Mexico City. Carrington discussed the art in her home and life as a surrealist. The film premiered in 2012 at the
San Diego Latino Film Festival.[62]
2016: Artists and Lovers, Ordovas Gallery, London, UK, Mayfair[64]
2016: Strange Worlds: The Vision of Angela Carter, Royal West of England Academy, UK, Bristol[64]
2016: Leonora Carrington: The Last Tuesday Society & Viktor Wynd's Museum of Curiosities, Fine Art & Natural History. Hackney, London, September – December 2016[65]
2015: Leonora Carrington: Tate Liverpool, 6 March – 31 May 2015[64]
2015: Surrealism and Magic, Boca Raton Museum of Art, USA, Boca Raton[64]
2015: Kahlo, Rivera & Mexican Modern Art, NSU Art Museum, Fort Lauderdale, USA, Ft. Lauderdale[64]
2015: Mexico: Fantastic Identity. 20th Century Masterpieces from the FEMSA Collection, Museum of Latin American Art, USA, Long Beach[64]
2015: Lorna Otero Project Album of Family, Miami, The Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum, Florida International University, USA, Downtown Miami[64]
2015: Surrealism: The Conjured Life, Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) Chicago, USA, Near North Side[64]
2015: Fields of Dream: The Surrealist Landscape, Di Donna, USA, Upper East Side[64]
2014: Surrealism and Magic, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, USA, Ithaca[64]
2014: Paper, Pencil & Ink: Prints & Other Works on Paper, Ruiz-Healy Art, USA, San Antonio[64]
2013: Max Ernst, Fondation Beyeler, Basel, Switzerland, Basel[64]
2013–2014: Leonora Carrington: The Celtic Surrealist, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Ireland (solo)[66]
2012: In Wonderland: The Surrealist Adventures of Women Artists in Mexico and the United States, Los Angeles[64]
^Women, Art & Society. London: Thames & Hudson. 1990. p. 183.
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^Barnitz, Jacqueline; Frank, Patrick (2015). Twentieth-century art of Latin America (Revised and expanded ed.). Austin: University of Texas Press. p. 124-127.
ISBN978-1-4773-0804-2.
^Women, Art and Society. London: Thames & Hudson. 1990. p. 314.
ISBN978050020405-4.
^Hubert, Renee (1 July 1991). "Leonora Carrington and Max Ernst: Artistic Partnership and Feminist Liberation". New Literary History. 22 (3): 715–745.
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^Hertz, Erich (June 2010). "Disruptive Testimonies: The Stakes of Surrealist Experience in Breton and Carrington". Symposium: A Quarterly Journal in Modern Literatures. 64 (2): 89–104.
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^Gaensbauer, Deborah B. (1994). "Voyages of Discovery: Leonora Carrington's Magical Prose". Women's Studies. 23 (3): 271–284.
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^Hoff, Ann (Spring 2009). "'I Was Convulsed, Pitiably Hideous': Convulsive Shock Treatment in Leonora Carrington's Down Below". Journal of Modern Literature. 32 (3): 83–98.
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^
abWeisz-Carrington, Leonora Carrington; ill. by Pablo (1976). The hearing trumpet. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
ISBN978-0-7100-8637-2.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)
^Orenstein, Leonora Carrington; illustrated by Pablo Weisz; translated [from the Spanish] by Rochelle Holt; foreword by Gloria (1975). The oval lady, other stories : six surreal stories. Santa Barbara: Capra Press.
ISBN978-0884960362.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)
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Sills, Leslie & Whitman. A. "Visions: stories of women artists (Morton Grove, Illinois, 1993)
Aberth, Susan L. Leonora Carrington: Surrealism, Alchemy and Art (Ashgate/Lund Humphries 2010),
ISBN978-1-84822-056-0
Conley, Katharine. Automatic Woman: The Representation of Woman in Surrealism (Lincoln, University of Nebraska Press, 1996)
Moorhead, Joanna. Another world (article about Carrington), Daily Telegraph (24 April 2010)
Van Raay, Stefan, Moorhead, Joanna and Arcq, Teresa. "Surreal Friends: Leonora Carrington, Remedios Varo and Kati Horna" (Lund Humphries in association with Pallant House Gallery, 2010)
Tina Kinsella, "We're frightened",
On Leonora Carrington, Public Conference, Irish Museum of Modern Art (2013).
Tina Kinsella, "An Exploration of Animality and Sexual Difference in the Artworks of Frida Kahlo, Leonora Carrington and Bracha L. Ettinger"
Animality and Sexual Difference, Public Conference, Dublin City University (March 2014).
Tina Kinsalla, "Surrealism to Subrealism".
Surrealism, Public Conference, Maynooth University, Ireland (10 October 2014).
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ISBN9781938922206.
Joanna Moorhead, The Surreal Life of Leonora Carrington (Virago, 2017).
Gloria Orenstein. "In Memory of the Most Magical Friend I Ever Had: Leonora Carrington", Femspec; Vol. 17, Iss. 1, 2016.
Nancy Deffebach. "Renaissance Science, Heresy, and Spirituality in the Art of Leonora Carrington". In "Arte y Ciencia: XXIV Coloquio Internacional de Historia del Arte." Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2002.