Throckmorton Fine Art explores Surrealism's lasting impact on photography
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, October 9, 2025


Throckmorton Fine Art explores Surrealism's lasting impact on photography
Lucien Clergue, Jean Cocteau, Le Testament d’orphee, 1959.



NEW YORK, NY.- When the French poet and theorist André Breton published his Surrealist Manifesto in 1924, he established a new artistic vision that tapped into the most electrifying dimensions of the human imagination. Continuing the centennial moment, Throckmorton Fine Art is presenting an exhibition showcasing the wide-reaching impact of Surrealism on photography with 50 works by more than 25 artists that span the century. SURREALISM, on view from October 2-November 29, 2025, features images made in Europe, the U.S., and Mexico, spotlighting a phenomenon that enriched the forms, themes, and aesthetics of photography.

The shattered collective consciousness of Europe in the wake of World War I saw Surrealist artists reject the grim realities of a modern civilization defined by violence and devastation, instead embracing the unconscious, intangible realm of dreams and inner desires. Against the backdrop of Freudian psychoanalysis and propelled by the radical energy of Dada, a generation of painters, sculptors, authors, photographers, filmmakers, and philosophers began to embrace the creative possibilities of the human psyche.

In a movement that looked to distort rational perceptions of the world, photography provided a tool for manipulating the representation of reality to thrilling or disturbing effect. Just as collage juxtaposed the real with the impossible, or automated drawing gave the unconscious mind free reign over creative output, various photographic techniques—from double exposures, sandwiched negatives, photomontage, and polarization to the use of absurd props and theatrical lighting—proved vital for Surrealism’s quest to release the hidden impulses of the mind.

Leonora Carrington, Kati Horna, and Dora Maar are among the Surrealist icons who are featured in the exhibition, but the language and spirit of the movement extended far beyond the artists in the canon. Their works are paired with numerous other photographers who adopted playful, experimental approaches inspired by Surrealism, from Edward Weston’s fetishized figuration of inanimate objects and Tina Modotti’s uncanny representation of human-like puppets to André Kertesz’s distortion of the body,

Portraits of the French playwright Jean Cocteau by photographers Berenice Abbott, Lucien Clergue, and Germaine Krull are also charged with a powerfully Surrealist sensibility, while the longer-term legacy of Surrealism is evident in later and contemporary works, such as Graciela Iturbide’s startling use of mirrors and animals, Francesca Woodman’s ghostly domestic scenes, and Ana Mendieta’s unsettling convergence of land and human form.

Mexico drew a wave of European artists from the late 1930s onwards, as they fled the outbreak of World War II. Beyond its European origins, Breton’s International Exhibition of Surrealism in Mexico City in 1940 marked a pivotal moment for Latin America’s involvement in and contribution to the style. Although it is largely considered a European movement, striking works by Mexican photographers like Lola Álvarez Bravo, Manuel Álvarez Bravo, and María García highlight Surrealism’s relationship with a region that was also home to a creative imagination that leaned towards the marvelous and fantastical—most notably, in the rise of magical realism.

“A hundred years after its emergence, Surrealism continues to remind us of the fragile border between reality and fantasy,” writes exhibition curator María Míllan, an art historian and writer. “It enables a dreamlike escape during times of social and political upheaval. Yet the bizarre or grotesque images of the Surrealist dream can be just as unsettling as the absurd and often unbearable realities of the waking world. Surrealism’s rupture with reason serves to reconfigure our vision of ourselves and cast a more astute gaze on what is real.”

Spencer Throckmorton founded Throckmorton Fine Art in 1980 and maintains a high-profile gallery in New York City’s East 57th Street art district. Throckmorton is unique in its approach to dealing in several categories and for supporting a vigorous exhibition and publishing program for each specialty. He has become one of the foremost sources for important Latin American contemporary and vintage photography, as well as for pre-Columbian artworks, and Chinese jade and antiquities.

Throckmorton Fine Art has participated in the most important art fairs including the annual Winter Show, where it has been a featured exhibitor for the last 30 years, and an exhibitor at The Photography Show presented by AIPAD for more than 20 years. Throckmorton has also been a member of ATADA (The Antique Tribal Art Dealers Association, Inc.) and the International Association for Ancient Asian and Tribal Art (formerly NADAOPA).

For further information contact: Spencer Throckmorton, Throckmorton Fine Art, Inc.
Call: +1 (212) 223-1059 | Email: info@throckmorton-nyc.com

Throckmorton Fine Art, 145 E. 57th Street, 3rd Floor, New York, NY 10022
www.throckmorton-nyc.com










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