
Untitled (Hôtel du Nord)
<p>This box shares motifs and clippings with several other boxes bearing the title <em>Hotel du Nord</em> (see, for example, <em>Hotel du Nord</em>, c. 1953, New York, Whitney Museum of American Art; Ashton 1974, p. 92, ill.). This was the name of a hotel in Copenhagen, in which the Danish writer Hans Christian Andersen, one of Cornell‘s favorite authors, often stayed; it was also the title of a 1938 film by Marcel Carne starring Arletty (pseud. for Leonie Bathiat). “From the moment she stood on the bridge over the Canal St.-Martin in the 1938... classic <em>Hotel du Nord</em>, Arletty entered film history,” reads her obituary; “her testy reply to her violent, wayward lover, ‘Atmosphere, atmosphere ...' indeed became one of the most memorable moments in French film" (“Obituaries,” <em>New York Times</em>, July 25,1992). This moment is one that could well have endeared the film to Cornell.</p> <p>The fact that the upper and lower edges of the rear wall, as well as the ceiling, are painted a deep blue, and the nature of the printed reproductions, hint at celestial or astronomical associations, which are more explicit in the box known as <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artworks/99777"><em>Hotel de l’Etoile</em></a>. At the top left are three printed images of a boar, a ram, and a bear (the first concealed in this photograph by the white dowel in the foreground). Vertically, on the right, are a griffin, a horse, and a camel. All six of these animal images are reproductions of drawings in a late fourteenth century sketchbook (Oxford, Magdalene College; see Colin Eisler, <em>Dürer”s Animals</em>, Washington, D.C., 1991, p. 9, figs. 1.7–8). Cornell may have intended these animals to allude to constellations. They were no doubt just some of the many images of animals he collected from natural history albums, astronomical charts, and endpapers. Cornell wrote to Marianne Moore in a letter decorated with collaged etchings of animals, birds, and plants: “Could one call the spirit that animates the animals in the end-paper snips ‘gargoylesque lyricism‘?” (Cornell 1993, p. 123).</p> <p>The image of the boy is <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artists/40561">Albrecht Durer</a>’s <em>Self Portrait</em> (1484, silverpoint, Vienna, Graphische Sammlung Albertina; see Walter L. Strauss, The Complete Drawings of Albrecht Durer, vol. 1, New York, 1974, pp. 4–5, ill.). Durer was an important figure to Cornell, both as artist and astronomer. According to Catherine Tennant, “It is to no less an artist than Durer, who published two star maps in the sixteenth century, which were copied in one form or another in all the star atlases which came after, that we owe the Western vision of the constellations” (<em>Box of the Stars</em>, London, 1993, p. 4).</p> <p>A French postage stamp of <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artists/11482">Jean Hey</a>’s painting <em>Suzanne de Bourbon in Prayer</em> (1492/93, Paris, Musée du Louvre; see Philippe Lorentz and Annie Regond, <em>Jean Hey: Le Maitre de Moulins</em>, 1990, exh. cat., pp. 44–45, ill.) is pasted onto a cylindrical wood weight, suspended from a rod by a metal hook. The same image, enlarged, appears in the box <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artworks/99790"><em>Ann—in Memory</em></a>.</p> <p>— Entry, Dawn Ades, <em>Surrealist Art: The Lindy and Edwin Bergman Collection at the Art Institute of Chicago</em>, 1997, p.64-65.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1945
- Dimensions
- 47 × 31.5 × 11.2 cm (18 1/2 × 12 3/8 × 4 3/8 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Joseph Cornell
Artist

Printmaking
A leading 20th century American artist and a pioneer of assemblage art, Joseph Cornell has become most well known for his “shadow boxes,” a series of works made from found objects and raw materials that are constructed in such a way as to illustrate narrative surreal, even fantastical scenes. His many variable interests, which ranged from Surrealism to opera to Romantic literature, deeply influenced his work, leading to allegorical and personal memory themed objects. Surrealism specifically was significant to his artistic style, with the method of juxtaposing objects and subjects in surprising combinations featuring heavily across his oeuvre.
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More by Joseph Cornell

Untitled (Derby Hat) from Prints for Phoenix House
1972 · Photogravure from a portfolio of three lithographs, two photogravures, two screenprints with stencil and varnish additions, one aquatint, one etching and aquatint, and one screenprint

Untitled (How to Make a Rainbow) from Prints for Phoenix House
1972 · Screenprint with stencil and varnish additions from a portfolio of three lithographs, two photogravures, two screenprints with stencil and varnish additions, one aquatint, one etching and aquatint, and one screenprint

Untitled (Landscape with Figure) from Prints for Phoenix House
1972 · Photogravure from a portfolio of three lithographs, two photogravures, two screenprints with stencil and varnish additions, one aquatint, one etching and aquatint, and one screenprint

Untitled (Hotel du Nord) from Prints for Phoenix House
1972 · Screenprint with stencil and varnish additions from a portfolio of three lithographs, two photogravures, two screenprints with stencil and varnish additions, one aquatint, one etching and aquatint, and one screenprint

Untitled (Satie and Ravel)
1968 · Collage composed of cut and pasted, commercially printed papers, with graphite, on cardboard

Now, Voyager
1966 · Collage composed of cut and pasted, commercially printed papers, with brush and black ink and touches of yellow gouache on untempered masonite
Record
Verified by Watts Index- Artist
- Joseph Cornell
- Year
- 1945
- Dimensions
- 47 × 31.5 × 11.2 cm (18 1/2 × 12 3/8 × 4 3/8 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1945-031379
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified