- Leonora Carrington
Infobox Person
image_size = 150px
name = Leonora Carrington
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caption =
birth_date = birth date and age|1917|4|6
birth_place = Lancaster,Lancashire ,England
death_date =
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occupation = Surrealist painterLeonora Carrington (born
April 6 1917 ) is a British-born artist, a surrealist painter and while living inMexico , a novelist.Early life
Carrington was born in Clayton Green, South Lancaster,
Lancashire Verify source|date=November 2007,England . Her father was a wealthy industrialist, her mother was IrishFact|date=May 2008. She also had an Irish nanny, Mary Cavanaugh, who told her Gaelic tales. Leonora had three brothers. Places she lived as a child included a house called Crooksey Hall. [http://www.kalin.lm.com/carrint.html accessed online July 21, 2007]Educated by governesses, tutors and nuns, she was expelled from many schools for her rebellious behavior until her family sent her to Florence where she attended Mrs. Penrose's Academy of Art. Her father was opposed to an artist's career for her, but her mother encouraged her. She returned to England and was presented at Court, but according to her, she brought a book to read by
Aldous Huxley "Eyeless in Gaza " (1936), instead. In London she attended theChelsea School of Art and joined the Academy ofAmédée Ozenfant . [http://www.kalin.lm.com/carrint.html accessed online July 21, 2007]She saw her first
Surrealist painting in aLeft Bank gallery in 1927 (when she was ten years old), and met many surrealists, includingPaul Eluard . (She was already familiar with surrealism fromHerbert Read 's book.)Fact|date=July 2007Leonora Carrington found little encouragement from her family to forge an artistic career. Matthew Gale, curator at the
Tate Modern singled out Surrealist poet and patronEdward James as the only champion of her work in Britain. James bought many of her paintings, and in 1947 arranged a show for her work atPierre Matisse ’s Gallery in New York. Some works are still hanging at his former family home now West Dean College inWest Dean, West Sussex . [http://arts.guardian.co.uk/features/story/0,,1981212,00.html#article_continue accessed online April4, 2008]Max Ernst
Carrington saw Max Ernst's work in the 1936
International Surrealist Exhibition in London where she was immediately attracted to theSurrealist artist before actually meeting him.She met
Max Ernst at a party in London in 1937. The artists bonded and returned to Paris together where Ernst promptly separated from his wife. In 1938 they left Paris and settled in Saint Martin d'Ardèche in the Provence region, of the south of France. The new couple collaborated and supported each other's artistic development. With the outbreak ofWorld War II , Max Ernst was arrested by French authorities for being a "hostile alien". Thanks to the intercession ofPaul Eluard , and other friends including the Americanjournalist Varian Fry he was discharged a few weeks later.Soon after the French occupation by the Nazis, he was arrested again, this time by the Gestapo, he managed to escape and flee to America with the help of
Peggy Guggenheim , a sponsor of the arts. [http://www.abcgallery.com/E/ernst/ernstbio.html accessed online July 21, 2007] After the Germans invaded their French village and took Ernst in custody in 1940, a devastated Carrington fled to Spain. Paralyzing anxiety and growing delusions culminated in a final breakdown at the British embassy in Madrid. Her parents intervened and had her institutionalized. She was given cardiazol, a powerful shock-inducing drug. When released into the care of a nurse who took her to Lisbon, Carrington ran away and sought refuge in the Mexican Embassy. Ernst meanwhile had been extricated fromEurope withPeggy Guggenheim , but he and Carrington had experienced so much misery that they were unable to reconnect.Mexico
After having escaped in Lisbon, Carrington arranged passage out of Europe with a Mexican diplomat who was a friend of
Picasso . In fact, she married the diplomat as part of the travel arrangements. Events from that period would inform her work perhaps forever. She lives and works in Mexico and New York."I didn't have time to be anyone's muse...I was too busy rebelling against my family and learning to be an artist." --Leonora Carrington, 1983
In Mexico she later married
Emericko Weisz . They had two sons:Gabriel Weisz , an intellectual and a poet andPablo Weisz , a surrealist artist and a doctor.Career
The first important exhibition of her work appeared in 1947 at the Pierre Matisse Gallery in
New York City . Leonora Carrington was invited to show her work in an international exhibition ofSurrealism where she was the only female English professional painter. She became a celebrity almost overnight. In Mexico she authored and has had published several books.Additional resources
"Women Artists and the Surrealist Movement" by Whitney Chadwick, Thames and Hudson, New York, 1985. With 220 illustrations, 20 in color.
"Visions: stories of women artists" by Leslie Sills, A. Whitman, Morton Grove, Illinois, 1993.
"Leonora Carrington- Surrealism, Alchemy and Art" by Susan L. Aberth. Lund Humphries, 2004.
Bibliography
* "La Maison de la Peur" (1938) - with illustrations by
Max Ernst
* "Une chemise de nuit de flanelle" (1951)
* "El Mundo Magico de Los Mayas" (1964) - illustrated by Leonora Carrington.
* "The Oval Lady: Surreal Stories" (Capra Press, 1975)
* "The Hearing Trumpet" (Routledge, 1976)
* "The Stone Door" (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1977)
* "The Seventh Horse and Other Tales" (Dutton, 1988)
* "The House of Fear" (Trans. K. Talbot and M. Warner. New York: E. P. Dutton, 1988)
* "The Hearing Trumpet" (Boston: Exact Change, 1996)References
External links
* [http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/carrington_leonora.html Artcyclopedia entry]
* [http://arts.guardian.co.uk/features/story/0,,1981212,00.html Writer Joanna Moorhead goes in search of her long-lost cousin]
* [http://www.freynorris.com/docs/Leonora_Carrington_cv.htm Curriculum Vitae]
* [http://www.carringtonleo.5u.com/ her son's website, accessed April 7, 2008] '
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