Dora Maar
at Tate Modern.
Untitled (portrait in profile), 1936
Untitled (portrait in profile), 1936
Untitled (portrait in profile), 1936
Untitled (portrait in profile), 1936
In this experimental series shown above, Maar combined one portrait with another that she likely produced for advertising purposes. The darkroom techniques she used here would appear again many decades later, in works she produced towards the end of her life. She created abstracted images by placing objects directly on the photosensitive paper before exposing them to light, and she superimposed negatives, scraped their surface, or corroded them using chemicals.
In 1931 Maar set up studio with director and film-set designer Pierre Kefer at this family home just outside Paris. Specialising in portraits, nudes, fashion and advertising, the studio was as prolific as the artists were connected. Maar called this her 'worldly period' on account of their glamorous clientele.
Untitled (Nush Eluard), 1935
The Years Lie in Wait for You, 1935
Around 1934, Maar worked on beauty product advertisements for clients including Ambre Solaire and the hair care brand Petrole Hahn.
Untitled (element for fashion photography), 1935
Untitled (fashion photograph), 1932-35
Shampoo or Woman's Hair with Soap, 1934
Untitled (photograph for advertisement), 1935
Maar's street photography coincided with one of the most unstable periods of French political life. Following WWI and the 1929 economic crash, unemployment levels were high. Under the Third Republic there was a change of government every few months.
Like many of her contemporaries, Maar felt compelled to record the lives of society's most disadvantaged. In 1933, without being commissioned by a newspaper or magazine, she travelled alone to the Costa Brava in Catalonia. In 1934 she went to London. On the outskirts of Paris she photographed 'La Zone', an undeveloped area that was home to about 40,000 citizens.
Untitled (lottery ticket dealer seated in front of Lloyds Bank, London), 1934
Untitled, (ragpicker), 1934
Untitled (the grimace), 1933
Untitled (beggar woman, Barcelona), 1933
Untitled (children playing, Barcelona), 1933
Untitled (headstand, Barcelona), 1933
The everyday strange:
As Maar's political leanings brought her close to the surrealists, their shared outlook soon expressed itself in her work. The surrealist movement aimed to transform human experience. Refusing the constraints of modern society, artists and writers advocated for intellectual, as well as social revolution. At the movement's heart was a rejection of the rational in favour of a vision that embraced the power of the unconscious mind.
In contrast to her documentary photography, in these photographs Maar used crops and dramatic angles to offer a disorienting view of the city. They evoke the immediacy of the chance encounter so prized by the surrealists.
Untitled, (Barcelona), 1933
Surrealism:
The answer came in the medium's precarious relationship to reality. If extreme close-ups and unexpected contexts could render the familiar strange, photomontages could create new worlds altogether. Maar's approach and preferred themes - the erotic, sleep, eyes and the sea - aligned perfectly with surrealist ideas. Maar became one of the few photographers included in the major surrealist exhibitions shown during the 1039s in Tenerife, Paris, London, New York and Amsterdam.
In 1930, Man Ray politely refused Maar's offer to be his studio assistant, saying there was nothing he could teach her.
Later, their acquaintance grew into friendship through her relationship with Picasso. When Picasso saw this image of Maar in Man Ray's studio, he begged him to trade it for one of his own etchings.
The solarisation technique seen here involves overexposing the print until the tones become reversed. After his assistant Lee Miller accidentally solarised one of his prints, and then started using the technique, Man Ray did the same.
Untitled (Leonor Fini), 1930s
Untitled (Leonor Fini), 1936
Argentinian painter and writer Leonor Fini made decadent imagery in which she challenged male domination. She often represented women in the form of a sphinx.
Silence, 1935-36
The backdrop for this photograph was taken from a plate by Albert Chevojon depicting the Orangery in the Palace of Versailles. Maar turned the vaulted ceiling upside down and retouched the windows to make them appear closed off. The result is an oppressive space that appears to be in an endless circular motion.
Dora Maar, Jean Moral, Untitled, 1935
Untitled (Hand-Shell), 1934
Untitled (Danger), 1936
Untitled (Forbidden Games), 1935
In the darkroom and the studio:
The conversation
Untitled (Portrait of Pablo Picasso), 1936
Untitled (Portrait of Pablo Picasso), 1936
Pablo Picasso, Portrait of Dora Maar, 1937
Dora Maar, Pablo Picasso, Portrait of Dora Maar, in profile, 1936
Pablo Picasso, Weeping Woman, 1937
From studies of Guernica came the Weeping Woman, the guise in which Picasso cast Maar over 30 times. Yet for Maar, this was not a portrait but a metaphor for the suffering of the Spanish people during the Civil War.
In 1942 Maar moved to another studio in Paris which became the setting for a new direction in painting. She made landscapes from the banks of the Seine, a short walk from her front door, and tightly composed still lifes.
The Cage, 1943
Untitled (Still Life), 1941
Untitled (still life with cup and spoon), 1951
Untitled (still life with jar and cup), 1945
La Grand Range, 1958
Though photography still appealed to Maar in her later years, documenting the world outside did not. More exciting, it seems, was what she could create in the darkroom. During the 1980s Maar made photograms by laying household objects or personal items onto photo-sensitive paper, or by tracing light across its surface. These camera-less experimentation testify to her long-held interest in manipulation.
A projection of Abstract Negatives, 1980s
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