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Self-Portrait

Self-Portrait

Claude Cahun (in 1929)

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Specifications

Title Self-Portrait
Material and technique Gelatin silver print on fibre-based paper
Object type
Photograph > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height Error: 13,5 is not a valid BCD value cm
Width Error: 8,5 is not a valid BCD value cm
Artists Artist: Claude Cahun
Accession number 3394 (MK)
Credits Purchased 1996
Department Modern Art
Acquisition date 1996
Creation date in 1929
Provenance Galerie Berggruen, Paris; Galerie Cokkie Snoei, Rotterdam 1996
Exhibitions New York 1997; Bruges 1999; London/Rotterdam/Bilbao 2007-08; London 2007a; Rotterdam 2017b
Internal exhibitions Collectie - surrealisme (2017)
External exhibitions Dal nulla al sogno (2018)
Claude Cahun. Onder de huid (2022)
Research Show research A dream collection - Surrealism in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Literature Leperlier 1992, pp. 84-116; Paris 1995, pp. 57, 143, cat. no. 65; Ander/Cottingham/Snauwaert 1997, p. 119, no. 65; Downie 2006, pp. 63-65, 158-60; Wood 2007, p. 6; Rotterdam 2007, p. 66
Material
Object
Technique
Gelatine silver print > Bromide print > Photographic printing technique > Mechanical > Planographic printing > Printing technique > Technique > Material and technique
Geographical origin France > Western Europe > Europe

Entry catalogue A dream collection - Surrealism in Museum Boijmans Van beuningen

Author: Marijke Peyser

This 1929 self-portrait shows Claude Cahun in the role of Elle, Bluebeard’s wife from the fairy tale of the same name.[1] In the photograph Cahun is made up; her eyes are expressionless, her lips compressed. This photo can be linked to the activities of Cahun and her lover and stepsister Marcel Moore (pseudonym of Suzanne Malherbe) in experimental theatre. At the end of the 1920s they were both members of Le Plateau, an avant-garde drama group led by Pierre Albert-Birot, whose work was strongly influenced by Japanese and Chinese theatre. His actors were given express instructions to make their faces up as masks and confine the spoken word to the essential. This photograph can be seen as a two-dimensional mise en scène that enabled Cahun to disguise herself and assume another identity. She herself said: ‘The happiest moments of my life? Dreams. Imagining that I am someone else. Playing my favourite role’.[2]

It is not easy to place Cahun’s self-portraits in art history. The first Surrealists – André Breton and Benjamin Péret – preferred to see women as ‘femmes enfant’, passive and kind, a creature that made man complete, was brought to life by him and inspired him.[3] Female artists perceived this attitude as restrictive.[4] They strove for social and sexual freedom, and asked themselves what their role was in a world dominated by male artists. Leonor Fini, Leonora Carrington, Remedios Varo and Dorothea Tanning all explored this in their work. As a rule their canvases contain a self-portrait, whereas artists like Max Ernst and René Magritte depicted themselves through an alter ego – Loplop for Ernst and the man in the bowler hat for Magritte. In this context Cahun’s photos have a special status: she was the first female photographer who almost exclusively made self-portraits in which she assumed various identities and addressed gender-related issues.

Breton disliked homosexuality, but the inclinations of lesbian women were tolerated in Surrealist circles. The friendship and collaboration between Breton and Cahun are evidence that she occupied a special place in the group. Both were members of the Association des Ecrivains et Artistes Révolutionnaires, a society of writers and artists that opposed the rising tide of Fascism between 1932 and 1939. In 1936 Breton and Cahun travelled to London for the International Surrealist Exhibition in the New Burlington Galleries, with which Breton was closely involved. With the acquisition of two of her photographic works in 1996, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen contributed to the rightful reassessment of this Surrealist artist, who was regarded by her contemporaries as one of their own.

 

Footnotes

[1] Colville 1999, p. 52.

[2] New York/Miami 1999-2000, pp. 21-22.

[3] Chadwick 1985, p. 65 and chapter 2.

[4] Ibid., p. 66.

Show research A dream collection - Surrealism in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
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All about the artist

Claude Cahun

Nantes 1894 - Saint Hélier 1954

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