
Pleine marge (Full Margin)
<p>Andre Breton’s poem <em>Pleine marge</em> take us on a dreamy journey through Paris, where we meet the ghosts of dead theologians that roam its streets. In the mystical imagery of his accompanying etching, Kurt Seligmann reinforces the poetry’s exploration of tension between the earthly realm and the celestial. Seligmann was among the first Surrealists to flee Europe in the face of the Nazis’ rise to power. Upon landing in New York, he began studying the history, applications, and cultures associated with magic, and that interest registers in his work from the time.</p> <p>Here, a pile of entrails foregrounds a magic circle depicting Christian and occult symbols—among them, a cross, ladder, serpent and wheel—referencing Heaven, Earth, and the boundaries between them. The specific theologians named in Breton’s text and those who are subtly referenced in Seligmann’s artwork concerned themselves with the supernatural, suggesting that the “full margins” of the poem’s title can be known to us if we look beyond the physical world. The cryptic date “1713,” styled as handwriting in the lower left, resembles André Breton's initials (AB) and was sometimes used as shorthand for the poet’s identity. This, and other visual clues have led some scholars to speculate that Seligmann’s etching is a coded portrait of the poet.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1940
- Dimensions
- 39 × 26 cm (15 3/8 × 10 1/4 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Kurt Seligmann
Artist

Painting
Kurt Seligmann was an American painter and printmaker who worked across abstraction and figuration, creating dense, layered compositions that incorporated automatist techniques and mythological imagery. Active in the postwar period, he developed a distinctly personal synthesis of Surrealist methods and Jungian psychology, translating psychological states into complex visual narratives. His work combined painting, etching, and collage to explore the unconscious as a generative space.
Full artist profile →More
More by Kurt Seligmann
The King
1960 · Oil on canvas
Metamorphosis
1959 · Oil and tempera on canvas
The Inventors
1958 · Oil on canvas
Untitled
1955 · Crayons on ivory wove paper, laid down on ivory wove paper
Happy Birthday to Earle and all Good Wishes From Both of Us
1955 · Lithograph on cream wove paper
Exorcism
1954 · Ink, gouache, wash, and resin on paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Kurt Seligmann
- Year
- 1940
- Dimensions
- 39 × 26 cm (15 3/8 × 10 1/4 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1940-040107
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





