{"id":537,"date":"2021-04-14T08:25:40","date_gmt":"2021-04-14T00:25:40","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.atelierauction.com\/globalupdates\/?p=537"},"modified":"2021-04-12T23:29:15","modified_gmt":"2021-04-12T15:29:15","slug":"synthetic-surrealism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.atelierauction.com\/globalupdates\/latest-news\/synthetic-surrealism\/","title":{"rendered":"SYNTHETIC SURREALISM"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>In 1949, seven years after fleeing a warring Europe for Mexico City, the artist and writer\u00a0<a id=\"auto-tag_leonora-carrington\" href=\"https:\/\/www.atelierauction.com\/globalupdates\" data-tag=\"leonora-carrington\">Leonora Carrington<\/a>\u00a0(1917\u20132011) read a very curious book. Robert Graves\u2019s\u00a0<em>White Goddess: A Historical Grammar of Poetic Myth<\/em>, published a year earlier, was a mythographic account of the ways in which paganism underlies Christian belief. It posited the existence of a moon-affiliated \u201cWhite Goddess of Birth, Love and Death,\u201d whom patriarchal structures obscure. According to Graves, one could not successfully write poetry without serving this female deity:<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe reason why the hairs stand on end, the eyes water, the throat is constricted, the skin crawls and a shiver runs down the spine when one writes or reads a true poem is that a true poem is necessarily an invocation of the White Goddess, or Muse, the Mother of All Living, the ancient power of fright and lust\u2014the female spider or the queen-bee whose embrace is death.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Graves\u2019s scholarly methods were suspect, his tone one of reverence and perhaps obsessive conviction, his sentences elaborate, his sources arcane. T.S. Eliot called the book \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.atelierauction.com\/globalupdates\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\">prodigious, monstrous, stupefying, indescribable<\/a>,\u201d and Laura Riding, Graves\u2019s former literary collaborator and romantic partner, disliked it very much. Riding felt her own spiritual convictions had been parodied by her ex in what amounted to a \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/AtelierAuctionsg\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\">whorish abomination<\/a>.\u201d Graves seems also to have invented his translations of Celtic poetry, relying on a limited grasp of the language. A series of deductions based on a purported relationship between letters of the Celtic alphabet and certain trees enabled him, he claimed, to uncover divine names hidden in ancient writing. Yet his entirely reasonable overall conclusion\u2014that modern monotheistic religion has effaced other, pluralist systems dedicated to matriarchy and the worship of nature\u2014found resonance with many nonacademic readers, and the book went into multiple editions in 1948, \u201952, and \u201961. It has since become a classic of Contemporary Paganism.<\/p>\n<p>Carrington, who had previously written a number of short stories in a piquant Surrealist vein\u2014many of them critical of Christianity\u2014took notice. Having absorbed Graves\u2019s fantastical investigation, the British artist went on to write her first and only novel,\u00a0<em>The Hearing Trumpet<\/em>, a tale of the apocalyptic upending of an elderly woman\u2019s life. It\u2019s clear\u00a0<em>The Hearing Trumpet<\/em>\u00a0was strongly influenced by Graves\u2019s revisionist mythology: the manuscript, according to Carrington scholar Susan L. Aberth, was completed in 1950. However, it was not published until 1969, in a French translation titled\u00a0<em>Le Cornet acoustique<\/em>. In 1974, it appeared simultaneously in the US and the UK, in the original English.<\/p>\n<p>Printed in more than twenty editions and some six languages over the past forty-plus years, Carrington\u2019s story was once again rereleased in January by New York Review Books, with an afterword by Polish novelist and Nobel laureate Olga Tokarczuk. After glowing reviews in the<em>\u00a0New York Times<\/em>\u00a0and the<em>\u00a0New Yorker<\/em>\u00a0by Blake Butler and Merve Emre, respectively, the first printing sold out in a month. This feat, along with recent republications of Carrington\u2019s two other major pieces of literary work\u2014her memoir of detention in a Spanish mental institution during World War II,\u00a0<em>Down Below<\/em>\u00a0(NYRB, 2017), and her collected short stories (Dorothy, A Publishing Project, also 2017)\u2014suggests that her authorial star is yet again on the rise, perhaps due to a renewed interest in the occult among Gen Z and millennial readers. But how should we think of what Emre calls Carrington\u2019s tendency to be continually \u201creborn,\u201d if never fully domesticated or canonized? Given her status as both a brilliant painter and an enchanting storyteller, might Carrington be more at home\u2014and, therefore, more recognizable as a major artist\u2014in our own increasingly interdisciplinary age? And why did she herself wait nearly two decades to publish her most fully realized literary work?<\/p>\n<p>Butler and Emre both wax enthusiastic about Carrington\u2019s novel. For Butler, it is a discovery: a \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/AtelierAuctionsg\">mind-flaying masterpiece<\/a>,\u201d full of humor and rare events that leave the reader \u201creconfigured.\u201d Emre, already a convert, sees it as a testament to Carrington\u2019s uncanny ability to mate \u201cthe artificial to the natural\u201d\u2014a capacity that reflects the perpetual human ambivalence regarding technology and our animal nature. Both reviewers question Carrington\u2019s reputation as the girl who beat the Surrealists at their own game, to paraphrase a bit glibly. She was heralded in Paris by Andr\u00e9 Breton et al., who prized her beauty and educated wit, as an example of the intersection of\u00a0<em>femme enfant<\/em>\u00a0and\u00a0<em>femme sorci\u00e8re<\/em>, realized in living flesh. Although she had a famed youthful relationship with the artist Max Ernst in the late 1930s and early \u201940s, Carrington eventually rejected the role of muse. Still, it was through Surrealism that she found her way to her remarkably expressive painting practice: the endeavor which, in 1938, produced her well-known\u00a0<em>Self Portrait (Inn of the Dawn Horse)<\/em>, a striking image of the artist consorting with a hyena and rocking horse while clad in an iconic pair of white jodhpurs.<\/p>\n<p>That painting, with its reliance on unmixed colors and psychological oneirism, is a prelude to Carrington\u2019s more lyrical and fantastical mature work, produced in Mexico City after World War II and characterized by delicate application of egg tempera. In Mexico City, Carrington collaborated closely with Spanish-Mexican painter Remedios Varo and photographer Kati Horna. And she set up her living space to accommodate her various roles, as mother to her two sons (by her second husband, photographer Csizi \u201cChiki\u201d Weisz), keeper of the house, and painter. Carrington\u2019s studio encompassed all these activities: it was kitchen, laboratory, nursery, salon, and study, all rolled into one. In this sense, it expressed Carrington\u2019s changing orientation to imagery, history, and artistic work. Less concerned with the shocking figurative juxtapositions and revelation of unconscious psychological drives so dear to the Breton-led version of Surrealism, Carrington\u2019s Mexican tableaux meditate upon magic and the divine, primarily as these are manifest in an internationalist array of folk traditions. It is in this context that\u00a0<em>The Hearing Trumpet<\/em>\u00a0should be read.<\/p>\n<p>This first-person novel concerns the fate\u2014which we at first take to be unhappy\u2014of a ninety-two-year-old woman named Marian Leatherby who lives in Mexico with her son and his unpleasant English wife. Marian, as she informs us, has a gray beard and limited hearing. Thanks to a timely gift\u2014the titular trumpet\u2014from her friend Carmella, an elderly artisan of cat-fur sweaters, Marian overhears her family plotting to send her to an old folks\u2019 home. But what a place this turns out to be! The residents are ensconced in fantastical cabins (\u201cbizarre dwellings\u2014shaped like a toadstool, a Swiss chalet, an Egyptian mummy, a boot, a lighthouse\u2014impossible and absurd, straight out of a Bosch painting\u201d); the director, Dr. Gambit, is a Gurdjieff-influenced evangelical fixated on aerobics; and there is a murder plot involving toxic chocolates. However, lest Carrington\u2019s tale appear a mere wacky caper watering down Ernst\u2019s own critique of Victorian mores in his 1934 collage novel,\u00a0<em>Une Semaine de bont\u00e9\u00a0<\/em>(A Week of Kindness), she quickly leaves the institutional narrative behind. An ice age abruptly threatens all earthly life, even as animals and humans are magically drawn together by the imminent return of the White Goddess, a massive beelike being who demands orgiastic worship via dancing and dining, usually both at once.<\/p>\n<p><em>The Hearing Trumpet<\/em>\u2019s nonsense is less surreal than synthetic. What had seemed like a novel becomes, in conclusion, a sort of cyclical prose poem of adoration, not unlike the Celtic works Graves bent to his will in\u00a0<em>The White Goddess<\/em>. Carrington seems to allude to the Tuatha D\u00e9 Danann deities of Irish legend, with their mother goddess Dana, whom she had heard about as a child from her Irish nurse and read about in James Stephens\u2019s comic quest-narrative\u00a0<em>The Crock of Gold<\/em>\u00a0(1912). Carrington\u2019s novel combines elements of Arthurian legend, Mexican culture, Irish myths, and proto New Age spiritualism, with a glimmer of the spirit of the European fairy tale.<\/p>\n<p>In this sense,\u00a0<em>The Hearing Trumpet<\/em>\u00a0seems particularly at home in the context of other folk-related works of feminist Anglophone fiction published in the 1970s, and one wonders if Carrington was at the vanguard of a sort of zeitgeist. The 1970s saw a number of notable works of fiction and criticism related to fairy tales and folklore, in which these vernacular forms are more or less elaborately reimagined. Most famous among these are Toni Morrison\u2019s novel\u00a0<em>Song of Solomon<\/em>\u00a0(1977) and Angela Carter\u2019s short story collection\u00a0<em>The Bloody Chamber<\/em>\u00a0(1979). (Carter happened to own a first, 1974, edition of\u00a0<em>The Hearing Trumpet.<\/em>) Also published during the decade were Bruno Bettelheim\u2019s\u00a0<em>The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales<\/em>\u00a0(1976), a psychoanalytic reading of fairy tales now thought to be in large part plagiarized from other scholarly works, and Marina Warner\u2019s\u00a0<em>Alone of All Her Sex: The Myth and the Cult of the Virgin Mary<\/em>, released the same year. All these works explore the significance of folklore in relation to the formation of personal identity. Unlike Graves, however, their authors have absorbed the lessons of Structuralism and construct their arguments by describing broader social systems, rather than attempting to trace elaborate genealogies back to a singular source of belief.<\/p>\n<p>Although I share some of Butler\u2019s and Emre\u2019s enthusiasm for\u00a0<em>The Hearing Trumpet<\/em>, today it feels more dated than Carrington\u2019s earlier short stories; it is less annoyed with the social strictures of Western civilization and more utopian and wondering, and at times this wonder is obtained by way of a celebratory mysticism that can feel a bit forced. What neither recent review mentions is that it is also a tale of the end of the world\u2014which Carrington foretells, ambivalently, as a time when women will at last, and once more, take control of the story.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Source:https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In 1949, seven years after fleeing a warring Europe for Mexico City, the artist and writer\u00a0Leonora Carrington\u00a0(1917\u20132011) read a very curious book. Robert Graves\u2019s\u00a0White Goddess: A Historical Grammar of Poetic Myth, published a year earlier, was a mythographic account of the ways in which paganism underlies Christian belief. It posited the existence of a moon-affiliated [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":538,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"tdm_status":"","tdm_grid_status":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[13,7,4,3],"tags":[133],"class_list":{"0":"post-537","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-auction","8":"category-events","9":"category-gallery","10":"category-latest-news","11":"tag-leonora-carrington"},"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v20.9 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>SYNTHETIC SURREALISM - Investable Art Auctioneer<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"In 1949, seven years after fleeing a warring Europe for Mexico City, the artist and writer\u00a0Leonora Carrington\u00a0(1917\u20132011) read a very curious book.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.atelierauction.com\/globalupdates\/latest-news\/synthetic-surrealism\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"SYNTHETIC SURREALISM - 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