Surrealist Muse by Anne Whitehouse, and: Escaping Lee Miller by Anne Whitehouse, and: Frida by Anne Whitehouse (review)

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Alan Steinfeld
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While surrealism sought to focus on the absurd, the fantastic, and the transhuman, the lives of Leonora Carrington, Lee Miller, and Frida Kahlo reflect the very real challenges of the human condition.</p> <p>Published by Ethel Zine and Micro Press, this exquisitely handcrafted book series, designed by Sara Lefsyk, is a collector's dream. Whitehouse's thought-provoking approach invites readers to delve into the personal struggles, triumphs, and contributions of these artists. In many ways, the exceptional lives of the three women she portrays can be characterized as \"surreal,\" marked by extreme physical suffering and emotional tribulations that set them apart from the ordinary women of their times.</p> <p>The situations of these lives reflect the sentiment of the poet Rainer Maria Rilke, who wrote, \"Works of art always spring from those who have faced <strong>[End Page 148]</strong> the danger, gone to the very end of experience, to the point beyond which no human being can go.\" Indeed, in these concise biographical sketches Whitehouse sheds light on journeys \"no human being\" would dare to embark upon.</p> <p>Her approach to Carrington, Miller, and Kahlo adds a new layer of understanding to the surrealist movement, showing it as a response to the harsh realities of the world. Overall, Whitehouse is both engaging and insightful, providing a fresh perspective into the lives of extraordinary women. Each was a contributor to the surrealist movement equal to the widespread male-dominated acknowledgments that litter the art history books. For instance, Whitehouse accuses the surrealist movement of misogyny and the tendency to portray women as mere muses and symbols of mystical and erotic fantasies. She attributes this hostility to the surrealist men's love and admiration for each other. When Kahlo was invited to Paris by the movement's leader, André Breton, she was met with a rude reception and eventually found refuge with the painter Marcel Duchamp.</p> <p>The title of Whitehouse's first book in the series, <em>Surrealist Muse</em> (2020, a reference to Leonora Carrington), is one the painter/writer would certainly have rejected. In fact, Carrington is quoted in a MoMA exhibition as stating, \"I didn't have time to be anyone's muse. … I was too busy rebelling against my family and learning to be an artist.\" Whitehouse emphasizes Carrington's fierce independence, even though she was the youngest and seemingly most glamorous member of the surrealist circle. Breton described Carrington as \"magnificent in her refusals,\" declining the roles of muse for Man Ray, Joan Miró, and even her first true love, Max Ernst. Carrington reminisced about her brief affair with Ernst as \"an era of paradise,\" until the war separated them. Yet she refused a further engagement when they met years later in New York. Her final act of defiance against male aggression occurred when she resisted the advances of the surrealist filmmaker Luis Buñuel. After being locked in a Mexican bathroom, she adorned the walls with her menstrual blood as a statement of her resistance. The episode reinforces the trilogy's theme of resilience which female surrealists used to defy the norms of polite society.</p> <p>In each narrative Whitehouse's nonlinear approach enhances the lyrical quality of these lives. One notable omission in the Carrington account is the lack of acknowledgment for her talents as a writer. A recent publication of <strong>[End Page 149]</strong> her absurdist stories indicates that they are equal to those of Franz Kafka. While Leonora eventually emerged from her schizophrenia, depression, and heartbreak as a wiser woman in Mexico, Whitehouse's next biographic retelling is a contrasting tale of a creative...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":41337,"journal":{"name":"AMERICAN BOOK REVIEW","volume":"11 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-06-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"AMERICAN BOOK REVIEW","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/abr.2024.a929681","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERATURE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Surrealist Muse by Anne Whitehouse, and: Escaping Lee Miller by Anne Whitehouse, and: Frida by Anne Whitehouse
  • Alan Steinfeld (bio)
surrealist muse
Anne Whitehouse
Ethelzine
https://www.ethelzine.com/shop/surrealist-muse-by-anne-whitehouse
$9.00 escaping lee miller
Anne Whitehouse
Ethelzine
https://www.ethelzine.com/shop/escaping-lee-miller-by-anne-whitehouse
$9.00 frida
Anne Whitehouse
Ethelzine
https://www.ethelzine.com/shop/frida-by-anne-whitehouse
$10.00

Anne Whitehouse's series on the women of surrealism provides a chronicle of the inner workings of three extraordinary women who emerged out of the surrealist art movement of the 1930s and 1940s. While surrealism sought to focus on the absurd, the fantastic, and the transhuman, the lives of Leonora Carrington, Lee Miller, and Frida Kahlo reflect the very real challenges of the human condition.

Published by Ethel Zine and Micro Press, this exquisitely handcrafted book series, designed by Sara Lefsyk, is a collector's dream. Whitehouse's thought-provoking approach invites readers to delve into the personal struggles, triumphs, and contributions of these artists. In many ways, the exceptional lives of the three women she portrays can be characterized as "surreal," marked by extreme physical suffering and emotional tribulations that set them apart from the ordinary women of their times.

The situations of these lives reflect the sentiment of the poet Rainer Maria Rilke, who wrote, "Works of art always spring from those who have faced [End Page 148] the danger, gone to the very end of experience, to the point beyond which no human being can go." Indeed, in these concise biographical sketches Whitehouse sheds light on journeys "no human being" would dare to embark upon.

Her approach to Carrington, Miller, and Kahlo adds a new layer of understanding to the surrealist movement, showing it as a response to the harsh realities of the world. Overall, Whitehouse is both engaging and insightful, providing a fresh perspective into the lives of extraordinary women. Each was a contributor to the surrealist movement equal to the widespread male-dominated acknowledgments that litter the art history books. For instance, Whitehouse accuses the surrealist movement of misogyny and the tendency to portray women as mere muses and symbols of mystical and erotic fantasies. She attributes this hostility to the surrealist men's love and admiration for each other. When Kahlo was invited to Paris by the movement's leader, André Breton, she was met with a rude reception and eventually found refuge with the painter Marcel Duchamp.

The title of Whitehouse's first book in the series, Surrealist Muse (2020, a reference to Leonora Carrington), is one the painter/writer would certainly have rejected. In fact, Carrington is quoted in a MoMA exhibition as stating, "I didn't have time to be anyone's muse. … I was too busy rebelling against my family and learning to be an artist." Whitehouse emphasizes Carrington's fierce independence, even though she was the youngest and seemingly most glamorous member of the surrealist circle. Breton described Carrington as "magnificent in her refusals," declining the roles of muse for Man Ray, Joan Miró, and even her first true love, Max Ernst. Carrington reminisced about her brief affair with Ernst as "an era of paradise," until the war separated them. Yet she refused a further engagement when they met years later in New York. Her final act of defiance against male aggression occurred when she resisted the advances of the surrealist filmmaker Luis Buñuel. After being locked in a Mexican bathroom, she adorned the walls with her menstrual blood as a statement of her resistance. The episode reinforces the trilogy's theme of resilience which female surrealists used to defy the norms of polite society.

In each narrative Whitehouse's nonlinear approach enhances the lyrical quality of these lives. One notable omission in the Carrington account is the lack of acknowledgment for her talents as a writer. A recent publication of [End Page 149] her absurdist stories indicates that they are equal to those of Franz Kafka. While Leonora eventually emerged from her schizophrenia, depression, and heartbreak as a wiser woman in Mexico, Whitehouse's next biographic retelling is a contrasting tale of a creative...

超现实主义缪斯》,安妮-怀特豪斯著;《逃离李-米勒》,安妮-怀特豪斯著:安妮-怀特豪斯的《逃离李-米勒》,以及安妮-怀特豪斯的《弗里达》(评论)
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 安妮-怀特豪斯的《超现实主义缪斯》和逃离李-米勒》,安妮-怀特豪斯著,以及《弗里达》,安妮-怀特豪斯著:Frida by Anne Whitehouse Alan Steinfeld (bio) 超现实主义缪斯 Anne Whitehouse Ethelzine https://www.ethelzine.com/shop/surrealist-muse-by-anne-whitehouse $9.00 Escaping Lee Miller Anne Whitehouse Ethelzine https://www.ethelzine.com/shop/escaping-lee-miller-by-anne-whitehouse $9.00 frida Anne Whitehouse Ethelzine https://www.ethelzine.com/shop/frida-by-anne-whitehouse $10.00 Anne Whitehouse 的超现实主义女性系列作品记录了三位非凡女性的内心世界,她们都是 20 世纪 30 年代和 40 年代超现实主义艺术运动中涌现出来的。超现实主义追求的是荒诞、梦幻和超人类,而莱奥诺拉-卡灵顿、李-米勒和弗里达-卡洛的生活则反映了人类面临的现实挑战。这套书由 Ethel Zine 和 Micro Press 出版,由 Sara Lefsyk 设计,手工精湛,是收藏家梦寐以求的作品。怀特豪斯以发人深省的方式邀请读者深入了解这些艺术家的个人奋斗、胜利和贡献。在许多方面,她所描绘的三位女性的非凡人生可以用 "超现实 "来形容,极度的肉体痛苦和情感磨难使她们有别于那个时代的普通女性。这些生活境遇反映了诗人赖讷-玛丽亚-里尔克的情感,他写道:"艺术作品总是从那些面对 [结束语 第 148 页] 危险、走到经验尽头、走到人类无法超越的地步的人身上产生的"。的确,怀特豪斯在这些简明扼要的传记中揭示了 "任何人 "都不敢踏上的旅程。她对卡林顿、米勒和卡洛的研究,为人们对超现实主义运动的理解增添了新的层次,显示出超现实主义运动是对残酷现实世界的一种回应。总之,怀特豪斯的作品既引人入胜,又富有洞察力,为我们了解非凡女性的生活提供了一个全新的视角。她们每个人都对超现实主义运动做出了贡献,与艺术史书中广泛存在的以男性为主导的认识不相上下。例如,怀特豪斯指责超现实主义运动厌恶女性,倾向于将女性仅仅描绘成神秘和色情幻想的缪斯和象征。她将这种敌意归咎于超现实主义男性之间的爱慕之情。当卡洛受到超现实主义运动领袖安德烈-布勒东的邀请前往巴黎时,她受到了粗暴的对待,最终在画家马塞尔-杜尚那里找到了避难所。怀特豪斯系列第一本书的书名《超现实主义缪斯》(2020 年,指莱昂诺拉-卡林顿)肯定会被这位画家/作家拒绝。事实上,卡林顿在纽约现代艺术博物馆的展览中曾说过:"我没有时间成为任何人的缪斯。......我忙于反抗我的家庭,学习成为一名艺术家"。怀特豪斯强调了卡林顿强烈的独立性,尽管她是超现实主义圈子中最年轻、看似最迷人的成员。布勒东形容卡林顿是 "拒绝中的伟大",她拒绝了曼-雷、琼-米罗,甚至她的初恋情人马克斯-恩斯特的缪斯角色。卡林顿回忆起她与恩斯特的短暂恋情时说,那是 "一个天堂般的时代",直到战争将他们分开。然而,多年后他们在纽约相遇时,她拒绝了进一步的交往。她最后一次反抗男性侵犯的行为发生在她拒绝超现实主义电影导演路易斯-布努埃尔(Luis Buñuel)的追求时。在被关进墨西哥浴室后,她用经血装饰墙壁,以示反抗。这段经历强化了三部曲的主题--女性超现实主义者用顽强的毅力蔑视礼仪社会的规范。在每段叙述中,怀特豪斯的非线性手法都增强了这些生活的抒情性。卡林顿的叙述中有一个值得注意的疏漏,那就是她作为作家的才华没有得到认可。最近出版的一本关于 [第 149 页末] 她的荒诞派故事的书表明,这些故事与弗朗茨-卡夫卡的作品不相上下。莱奥诺拉最终从精神分裂症、抑郁症和心碎中走出来,成为墨西哥一位更加睿智的女性,而怀特豪斯的下一部传记则是一个与之截然不同的故事,讲述了一位富有创造力的......
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AMERICAN BOOK REVIEW LITERATURE-
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