LONDON.- M&L Fine Art presents 'Max Ernst: An Invitation to Look', a survey exhibition dedicated to Max Ernst (1891 1976), a giant of twentieth-century art and leading Surrealist artist. The show features fifteen works from an exceptional private collection, covering Ernsts entire career and spanning from 1925 to 1971. The works were acquired largely in the1950s and 1960s by a prominent Italian collector and close friend of the artist. Characterized by its personal, domestic and intimate character, this body of works exemplifies Ernsts belief that the artist should be a diver into subterranean depths, probing the mysteries of the unconscious and the imagination.
Unseen in public for two decades, the works on display come from key periods of Max Ernsts career and have appeared in the some of the most important exhibitions of the artists work, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York and Art Institute Chicago exhibitions, 1961; Palazzo Grassi, Venice, 1966; and Haus der Kunst Munich, 1979. The works exceptional provenance, linked to the major galleries and dealers of Ernst, Alexander Iolas and Arturo Schwarz, further underlines the scope and breadth of the collection. This exhibition is accompanied by an illustrated catalogue with an original essay by Dr Jürgen Pech, one of the leading authorities on Ernst and the editor of the artists catalogue raisonné.
'Max Ernst: An Invitation to Look' features works that encompass the full range of different techniques explored by the artist, including oil on canvas and panel, frottage, collage, grattage, drawing and gesso. This show aims both to represent the life and work of the artist, and also to transmit the intimate vision of the collector who assembled this significant group of works reflecting every aspect of the artists career.
Like many European artists of his generation, the young Ernst was profoundly marked by the trauma of World War I, which interrupted his art studies. He had begun studying art as an autodidact in 1912, when he discovered Picasso, Van Gogh and Gauguins work at exhibitions in Cologne. After serving in the war, Ernst returned to Cologne and became interested in Paul Klee and Giorgio de Chirico, co-founding the Cologne Dada movement in 1919. In 1921 he met André Breton, father of Surrealism, and the writer Paul Éluard, who would remain a lifelong friend. Following a lengthy ménage-a-trois with Éluard and his wife Gala (the soon-to-be muse and wife of Salvador Dalí) which took Ernst as far as Saigon, he settled in Paris. In 1925 Ernst officially began his career as an artist.
The earliest works in this show come from this first Parisian sojourn, starting with Larbre, 1925, a delicate work on paper that demonstrates the artists interest in developing the techniques of collage and frottage, invented by him that same year. Also from 1925 is Meer und Mond (Sea and Moon), a jewel-like oil on panel depicting a nightscape bathed in smoky darkness, in which a black moon seems to project golden rays on a shadowy sea. These early works crucially introduce lifelong themes that recur in Ernsts oeuvre,
In the 1920s and early 1930s, Ernst produced three illustrated books: La femme 100 têtes (The Hundred Headless Woman) 1929 his first collage novel as well as Reve d' une petite fille qui voulut entrer au Carmel (A Little Girl Dreams of taking the Veil) 1930, and finally Une semaine de bonté (A Week of Kindness) 1934. The visual lexicon of these novels, comprised of collaged images sourced from scientific works, medical encyclopaedias and other illustrated volumes, demonstrate the density of Ernsts formal and narrative investigations of those years. Positioned half-way between Dada and Surrealism, chance and narrative logic, text and image, the two collages on display, in the words of Ernsts fourth wife and translator Dorothea Tanning, add a new dimension of psychic violence to the already fraught pictures in which night and dream are the sovereign forces.
In 1934, Ernst paints the oil on paper La horde des barbares, a composition fraught with layered meanings, in which grattage reveals a group of indistinct fantastical figures immersed in a dark forest. Ernst first coupled birds and windblown, apocalyptic animals in a series of small works entitled The Horde (1927), reprising the theme in 1934 in a series of even smaller paintings called The Barbarians, to which the painting on show belongs. The forest, an archetypal symbol in Germanic culture, in Ernsts work becomes a metaphor for the unconscious and imaginations most wild and recondite states. Crucially, in his biography of the artist, the art critic John Russell also identifies these creatures, painted the year following Hitlers rise to power in Germany, as expressions of Ernst's fearful anticipation of the impending devastation in Europe during World War II.
The artists presciently ominous imagery sadly came to life, and, having already been branded a degenerate artist in his native Germany in 1937, in1939 Ernst was imprisoned in Vichy France as an undesirable foreigner alongside fellow German Surrealist Hans Bellmer. Luckily for the artist, Peggy Guggenheim had, in that same year, begun purchasing art in Paris at her famous one picture a day rate, discovering and buying many Ernst masterpieces now in her collection in Venice. Thanks to her intercession and to the tireless efforts of Varian Fry, the journalist who during World War II helped obtain American visas for countless European artists and intellectuals including Marcel Duchamp, Hannah Arendt, and Marc Chagall Ernst emigrated to the United States in 1941. Leaving behind his then-lover Leonora Carrington, and wounding her psychologically and physically, Ernst eloped with Peggy Guggenheim. Asked why she loved Max Ernst, Guggenheim replied: Because hes so beautiful and because hes so famous.
Joined by his son Jimmy, Ernst became a driving force behind Peggy Guggenheims influential The Art of This Century Gallery, founded in 1942. In 1943, Guggenheim organized a ground-breaking, all female group show titled Exhibition by 31 Women, dispatching her husband to select works for the exhibition. The encounter between Ernst and one of the artists, Dorothea Tanning, soon gave rise to a passionate love affair which put an end to Ernsts romantic and professional involvement with Guggenheim. After her husband left her for Tanning, Guggenheim commented, I realized I should have had only 30 women in the show.
Ernst and Tanning lived in New York for a few years before moving to Sedona, Arizona, drawn to the expanse of the great American landscape after the tumultuous experience of life in New York. In this period Ernsts work was strongly influenced by what he saw as the poetic imagery of the American desert, clearly discernible in the burnt amber tones of the two canvases on view, Dancers under the starry Sky and Birds in the Forest, both 1951. These works are also significantly a tribute to the Native Americans whom Ernst celebrated in a 1953 poem which praises their connection to their tribal identity and harmony with nature. Far from living in isolation, Ernst and Tanning were at the centre of a vibrant community where they invited a roster of high-profile friends including Henri Cartier-Bresson, Lee Miller, Roland Penrose, Yves Tanguy, and George Balanchine. Married in 1946, in a double wedding with Man Ray and Juliet Browner in Hollywood, their romance was only interrupted by Ernsts death in 1976.
Ernst returned to Europe in 1953, and in 1954 won the Grand Prize for Painting at the Venice Biennale. During his later years in Europe, living mainly in Paris, Ernst renewed his intense interest in collage, which he used both in works on canvas as well as in works on paper. The works in on view made from the 1960s onwards display a wide variety of references to his work of the preceding decades, for example the found object in Julia Baisers (1968), or the sun motif in Eine Heringsschule (1965) and Floral (1968). The latest of the works on show, two collages from 1971 titled Ou donner la bobine and La vie quotidienne, were presented in Milan in an important exhibition at Alexander Iolas gallery there. Titled Lieux Communs, the show featured twelve collages by Ernst which illustrated eleven poems by the Italian author Sergio Tosi, also published as a limited edition artists book in 1000 copies. Once again, illustrating the artists career-long interest in pushing the limits of metaphor and symbolism in literature and art, this exhibition confirmed Ernsts near-endless capacity for invention.
Max Ernst died in Paris on 1 April 1976 at the age of 88, following an influential career that straddled the twentieth century and much of the western hemisphere. Ernsts legacy, inextricably linked to Surrealism and Dada but also extending to Abstract Expressionism and beyond, is also based on his capacity to innovate the German tradition of romantic culture and imagery by activating everyday subject matter to dazzling and fantastical effect. In this regard, his work exemplifies the process of romanticisation defined by Novalis, the early German romantic poet and philosopher, in 1798, whose aim is to lend a higher meaning to what is common, a mysterious guise to the ordinary, the dignity of the unknown to the known, an infinite appearance to the finite.
Dr Jürgen Pech, author of the exhibition catalogue and a leading Ernst scholar, will publish a new book on the artist, Max Ernst: D-Paintings, presenting all 36 of the paintings Ernst gave to his last wife, the artist Dorothea Tanning, on her birthday each year they were together. The book will be published by the Max Ernst Museum in Bruhl, Germany in late October to accompany an exhibition of Ernst's D-Paintings there, opening on 1 November. Max Ernst continues to be shown in institutional exhibitions worldwide, including a 2018 survey at MoMA titled Max Ernst: Beyond Painting. His work was recently exhibited this year at the State Hermitage Museum in an exhibition entitled Max Ernst. The Paris Years.