Revolving Doors: Sept tapisseries de Man Ray
Revolving Doors is a series of works created by Man Ray early in his career in the United States around 1916-1917, before he moved to Paris in 1921 and became a central figure in the Dada and Surrealist movements.
This series accompanied Man Ray throughout his long career: initially created as a series of colored paper collages around 1916, it was exhibited in New York at the Daniel Gallery in 1919 and later featured in the 1935 edition of the Surrealist magazine Minotaure. The series was reproduced using stencils and published as lithographs in 1926 by Surrealist editions, and again in 1972 by publisher Luciano Anselmino, which served as inspiration for tapestries created in 1973 by Frédérique Bachellerie and Peter Schönwald.
OPENING ON SEPTEMBER 18, FROM 6 TO 9 PM
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Les rares tapisseries colorées de Man Ray
Blind Magazine, 22 October 2024 This link opens in a new tab. -
Surréalisme : des tapisseries inconnues de Man Ray exposées à Paris
Magali Jauffret, L'Humanité, 8 October 2024 This link opens in a new tab. -
Revolving Doors : Sept tapisseries de Man Ray
TEXTILE/ART, 24 September 2024 This link opens in a new tab. -
Val Telberg » An American Surrealist in Paris & Man Ray » Revolving Doors
Photography now, 11 September 2024 This link opens in a new tab.