Man Ray (born Emmanuel Radnitzky) (1890 – 1976) was an American visual artist who spent most of his career in France. He was a significant contributor to the Dada and Surrealist movements, although his ties to each were informal. He produced major works in a variety of media but considered himself a painter above all. He was best known for his photography, and he was a renowned fashion and portrait photographer. Man Ray is also noted for his work with photograms, which he called "rayographs" in reference to himself.
Man Ray's career is distinctive above all for the success he achieved in both the United States and Europe. First maturing in the center of American modernism in the 1910s, he made Paris his home in the 1920s and 1930s, and in the 1940s he crossed the Atlantic once again, spending periods in New York and Hollywood. His art spanned painting, sculpture, film, prints and poetry, and in his long career he worked in styles influenced by Cubism, Futurism, Dada and Surrealism.
Although he matured as an abstract painter, Man Ray eventually disregarded the traditional superiority painting held over photography and happily moved between different forms. Dada and Surrealism were important in encouraging this attitude; they also persuaded him that the idea motivating a work of art was more important than the work of art itself.
For Man Ray, photography often operated in the gap between art and life. It was a means of documenting sculptures that never had an independent life outside the photograph, and it was a means of capturing the activities of his avant-garde friends. His work as a commercial photographer encouraged him to create fine, carefully composed prints, but he would never aspire to be a fine art photographer in the manner of his early inspiration, Alfred Stieglitz.
André Breton once described Man Ray as a 'pre-Surrealist', something which accurately describes the artist's natural affinity for the style. Even before the movement had coalesced, in the mid 1920s, his work, influenced by Marcel Duchamp, had Surrealist undertones, and he would continue to draw on the movement's ideas throughout his life. His work has ultimately been very important in popularizing Surrealism.
© 2018. All images are copyrighted © by Man Ray or assignee. The use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained.
Man Ray's career is distinctive above all for the success he achieved in both the United States and Europe. First maturing in the center of American modernism in the 1910s, he made Paris his home in the 1920s and 1930s, and in the 1940s he crossed the Atlantic once again, spending periods in New York and Hollywood. His art spanned painting, sculpture, film, prints and poetry, and in his long career he worked in styles influenced by Cubism, Futurism, Dada and Surrealism.
Although he matured as an abstract painter, Man Ray eventually disregarded the traditional superiority painting held over photography and happily moved between different forms. Dada and Surrealism were important in encouraging this attitude; they also persuaded him that the idea motivating a work of art was more important than the work of art itself.
For Man Ray, photography often operated in the gap between art and life. It was a means of documenting sculptures that never had an independent life outside the photograph, and it was a means of capturing the activities of his avant-garde friends. His work as a commercial photographer encouraged him to create fine, carefully composed prints, but he would never aspire to be a fine art photographer in the manner of his early inspiration, Alfred Stieglitz.
André Breton once described Man Ray as a 'pre-Surrealist', something which accurately describes the artist's natural affinity for the style. Even before the movement had coalesced, in the mid 1920s, his work, influenced by Marcel Duchamp, had Surrealist undertones, and he would continue to draw on the movement's ideas throughout his life. His work has ultimately been very important in popularizing Surrealism.
© 2018. All images are copyrighted © by Man Ray or assignee. The use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained.
Mr Man Ray |
Salvador Dalí and Man Ray in Paris, on June 16, 1934 |
1908 |
1913, Landscape (Paysage Fauve) |
1916, Legend |
1916, Long Distance |
1916, Orchestra |
1916, Silhouette |
1916, The Rope Dancer Accompanies Herself with Her Shadows |
1916-17, Concrete Mixer |
1916-17, Decanter |
1916-17, Dragonfly |
1916-17, Mime (Revolving Doors) |
1917, Quartet |
1917, Shadows |
1917, The Meeting |
1917, Young Girl |
1918-20, Woman (La Femme) |
1919, Seguidilla |
1920, Kiki de Montparnasse |
1920, Lampshade |
1920, The Coat-Stand (Porte manteau) |
1920, Three Heads (Joseph Stella and Marcel Duchamp, painting bust portrait of Man Ray above Duchamp) |
1921, Portrait Of Rose Sélavy |
1921–22, Rencontre dans la porte tournante |
1922, Marquise Casati |
1922, The kiss |
1922, Untitled (Rayograph) |
1922, Untitled (Rayograph) |
1923, Indestructible Object |
1924, Ingres's Violin |
1926, black and white |
1926, Emak Bakia |
1927, Nude |
1929, Four or Five Times |
1929, Woman with Long Hair |
1930, Le Baiser (The Kiss) |
1930, Mannequin on Staircase |
1930, Portrait of Tanya Ramm |
1930, The Veil |
1932, Glass Tears |
1932-34, Observatory Time - The Lovers |
1933, Erotique Voilee |
1934, Multiple Exposure |
1934, Neck |
1934-35, Mathematical Object (Anthony) |
1936, Objet Trouvé Pour Marcel Jean |
1937, Dora Maar, Ady, Picasso and Kasbec-dog (Holidays in Antibes) |
1938, La Fortune |
1938, Mannequin (Adieu foulard) |
1943, The Mug Drawing III |
1948, Permanent Attraction |
1949, Shakespearean Equation, Hamlet |
1962, L'Incompris (Misunderstood) |
1963, Cadeau (Gift) |
1965, Needle and Thread |
1966, Untitled (Two Hands) |
1967, The father of Mona Lisa |
1970, Autoportrait |
1971, Untitled (Bowl and Spoon) |
1973, La Beau Temps |
Cala Lilies |
ModeArte |
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