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Thursday, September 11, 2025 |
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The Met presents first major exhibition on Man Ray's radical reinvention of art through the rayograph |
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Man Ray (American, 18901976), Marine, ca. 1925. Gelatin silver print, 8 3/4 × 11 9/16 in. (22.2 × 29.3 cm) Private collection; courtesy Galerie 19002000, ParisNew York © Man Ray 2015 Trust / Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY / ADAGP, Paris 2025
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NEW YORK, NY.- Man Ray: When Objects Dream at The Metropolitan Museum of Art is the first major exhibition to examine the radical experimentation of American artist Man Ray (1890-1976) through one of his most significant bodies of work, the rayograph. Man Ray coined the term rayograph to name his version of the 19th-century technique of making photographs without a camera. He created them by placing objects on or near a sheet of light-sensitive paper, which he then exposed to light and developed. These photogramsas they are also calledappear as reversed silhouettes, or negative versions, of their subjects. They often feature recognizable items that become wonderfully mysterious in the artist's hands. Their transformative nature led the Dada poet Tristan Tzara to describe rayographs as capturing the moments when objects dream. While Man Ray acknowledged the photographic origins of his new works, he did not think of them as strictly bound by medium.
Taking Man Rays lead, this presentation is the firstmore than a century since he introduced the rayographto situate this signature accomplishment in relation to his larger artistic output. The exhibition is on view September 14, 2025, through February 1, 2026.
As one of the most fascinating and multi-faceted artists in the avant-garde movements of the early 20th century, Man Ray challenged traditional narratives of modernism through his daring experimentation with diverse artistic mediums, said Max Hollein, The Mets Marina Kellen French Director and Chief Executive Officer. Anchored by Man Rays innovative and mesmerizing rayographs along with new research and discoveries, this exhibition invites visitors to explore his ground breaking manipulation of objects, light, and media, which profoundly reframed his artistic practice and impacted countless other artists. Were so thrilled to include thirty-five works by Man Ray in this exhibition as part of Johns incredible promised gift.
Drawing from the collections of The Met and more than 50 U.S. and international lenders, the presentation includes more than 60 rayographs, many of which were featured in important publications and exhibitions at the time of their making, and 100 paintings, objects, prints, drawings, collages, films, and photographs to highlight the central role of the rayograph in Man Rays boundary-breaking practice. The exhibition marks a collaboration with the recently closed Lens Media Lab, Yale University, under the direction of Paul Messier, and with photography conservators and curators at various lending institutions, to study more than fifty rayographs.
In the winter of 1921, while working late in his Paris darkroom, Man Ray inadvertently produced a photogram by placing some of his glass equipment on top of an unexposed sheet of photographic paper he found among the prints in his developing tray. As he wrote in his 1963 autobiography, Before my eyes an image began to form, not quite a simple silhouette of the objects as in a straight photograph, but distorted and refracted
In the morning I examined the results, pinning a couple of the Rayographsas I decided to call themon the wall. They looked startlingly new and mysterious. This supposed accident, now the stuff of legend, has obscured the fact that rayographs might be seen as the culmination of Man Rays work up to 1921 as well as the frame through which he would redefine his work thereafter. They harnessed his interests in working between dimensions, media, and artistic traditions, fittingly at the moment between Dada and Surrealism, which writer Louis Aragon once called the mouvement flou (flou means hazy, blurry, or out of focus in French).
Unfolding in a series of spaces that intersect with a central, dramatic presentation of rayographs, the exhibition illuminates their connections with Man Rays work in other media, including assemblage, painting, photography, and film. In approaching the rayograph in this expansive way, the exhibition also offers a reappraisal of the most productive and creatively significant period of his long career, beginning in New York around 1915 with his ambitious paintings and concluding in Paris in 1929 with his fine-tuning of the solarization process with Lee Miller. A critical factor across the exhibition is the central role of objects for Man Rays career, both in the creation of many of the rayographs and in his work more generally.
At its core, Man Ray: When Objects Dream focuses new attention on some of the artists most recognized, but little-studied, works, most particularly the rayograph. The exhibition opens with Champs délicieux (Delicious Fields) (1922), a portfolio of 12 rayographs which marks the first time Man Ray presented his photograms to the public. Critics hailed them for putting photography on the same plane as original pictorial works. The presentation concludes with the working copy of Champs délicieux, which the artist canceled and dedicated to his friend, Dada artist Tristan Tzara, in 1959.
Between these two works, twelve thematic sections of the exhibition explore such concepts as the silhouette, the dream, the body, the object, and the game, which are inspired by Man Rays experimentation with the rayograph. Other groupings will focus on specific media and techniques, and the artists studio, as well as watershed moments in the artists production, such as the years of 1923 and 1929, when Man Ray unexpectedly returned to painting. Three of his newly restored films, Retour à la raison (Return to Reason) (1923), Emak Bakia (1926), and Létoile de mer (The Starfish) (1928), will be screened within the exhibition.
Highlights include such iconic objects like Man Rays iron studded with tacks, known as Cadeau (Gift) (1921), and his metronome, Object to be Destroyed (1923), that keeps time with the swinging eye of his companion, the photographer Lee Miller. Celebrated photographs, including his landmark Le violon dIngres (1924), in which the torso of the artist and performer Kiki de Montparnasse (Alice Prin) is depicted as a musical instrument, are also featured. The exhibition brings together some of his boldest but most refined experimental workscompositions like Aerograph (1919), a painting made with an airbrush and pigment sprayed through and around items from his studio. For Man Ray, objects could function as metaphors for the body, as demonstrated in works such as Catherine Barometer (1920) and Lhomme (Man). Rarely seen paintings in the exhibition, including Paysage suédois (Swedish Landscape) (1926) record the artist's great experimentation, working paint without a brush and in an almost sculptural way, building up and scraping down the surface that reflects his experiments in the darkroom.
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Today's News
September 11, 2025
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The Met presents first major exhibition on Man Ray's radical reinvention of art through the rayograph
Colored gemstones shine in Heritage's Sept. 29 fall jewelry auction
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Secession presents 'Danzante,' a new exhibition by artist June Crespo
The National Art Center, Tokyo presents Prism of the Real: Making Art in Japan 1989-2010
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PalaisPopulaire opens Charmaine Poh's first institutional exhibition
National Gallery announces 10 new artistic projects for After the Rain
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La Pascaline 1642: For the first time in history, a machine replaces the human brain
Max Lamb and 1882 Ltd. collaborate on new ceramic furniture exhibition
Swarthmore College presents 'Transitions: Recent prints and animations by Kakyoung Lee'
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