
La poupée (The Doll)
<p>The Surrealist artist Hans Bellmer began to assemble and photograph sculptural forms of doll parts in 1933. After self-publishing (with his friend Thomas Eckstein) ten silver gelatin prints of unsettling doll compositions, <em>Die Puppe</em>, in Karlsruhe in 1934, eighteen of Bellmer’s photographs found wider distribution in the Paris-based surrealist journal <em>Minotaure</em> in December of 1934 (“Poupée, variations sur le montage d'une mineure articulée,” <em>Minotaure</em> 6 (Winter 1934–35, pp. 30–31)). This 1936 book is a limited-edition re-issue by Guy Lévis-Mano in Paris of Bellmer’s first publication.</p> <p>Faithful to the photo album-like format of the artist’s first design, this book contains ten gelatin silver prints mounted on cardstock and bound into a collection. With each page, the viewer is confronted with compositions both visceral and impossible. The doll’s soft curves and anatomical details visually suggest living forms that upon closer examination reveal themselves as dismembered fragments too numerous or too few to form a real body. It’s no surprise that the uncomfortable tension between bodily attraction and revulsion appealed to Surrealist sensibilities. Bellmer’s sculptural assemblages and the eerie photographs of them he produced bear a resemblance to both pornography or the depiction of a hideous crime.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1936
- Dimensions
- 16.7 × 12.8 × 0.5 cm (6 5/8 × 5 1/16 × 1/4 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Hans Bellmer
Artist

Painting
German artist Hans Bellmer experimented with Surrealist sculptural forms in the early decades of the 20th century. He sustained a lifelong fascination with images of manipulated, contorted, disfigured or bound forms of girls and women in drawings, paintings, photograph, and sculptures. He was best known for his life size dolls resembling disassembled mannequins, which he developed in response to the Nazi regime’s obsession with physical perfection.
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More by Hans Bellmer
Untitled from Homage to Picasso (Hommage à Picasso)
1973 · Etching from a portfolio of thirty-one lithographs (one with aquatint, one with collotype, one with screenprint), twenty-two screenprints (one with embossing, one with flocking, one with stencil), eleven etchings (five with aquatint, one with aquatint and drypoint, one with aquatint, drypoint, and engraving), three aquatints (one with etching), and two woodcuts
Untitled
1969 · Etching, with applied green paint, on brown mulberry paper
Plate Ten, from Petit Traite de Morale
1968 · Etching on white Japanese paper
The Bat
1968 · Etching in black and white on brown laid paper
Notes for New Justine, from Petit Traite de Morale
1968 · Etching on white Japanese paper
Plate Eight, from Petit Traite de Morale
1968 · Etching on white Japanese paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Hans Bellmer
- Year
- 1936
- Dimensions
- 16.7 × 12.8 × 0.5 cm (6 5/8 × 5 1/16 × 1/4 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1936-126131
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





