Les jeux de la poupée (Games of the Doll)

<p>In his introduction to this Surrealist collaboration, poet Paul Éluard promotes the virtues of experimental poetry. He argues that by defying convention, experimental poetry allows readers to peer deeply into unexpected compositions and perhaps find their authentic self. Hans Bellmer’s “dolls” populating the pages of this book are themselves examples of unexpected compositions. In some photographs, mannequin parts lay in a pile on the studio floor, while in others forests or domestic settings form the backgrounds for sets of disembodied legs. Hand-painted colors lend an otherworldly glow to the silver gelatin prints, highlighting fleshy contours or infusing the whole picture with a neon sheen. Éluard’s fourteen prose poems, originally written in 1938, accompany each photograph, his words suggesting inner desires for these impossible beings and enticing the viewer to find life where there is none. Disrupted by the war, this edition was finally published in 1949 by Éditions Premières, owned by the art dealer Heinz Berggruen. The Art Institute’s example is signed by the artist, and number 118 of an edition of 136.</p>

Catalogue

Year
1949
Dimensions
25 × 20 × 3 cm (9 7/8 × 7 7/8 × 1 3/16 in.)

Artist

Hans Bellmer
Hans Bellmer

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.

Paris, France

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Untitled from Homage to Picasso (Hommage à Picasso)

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

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Untitled

Untitled

1969 · Etching, with applied green paint, on brown mulberry paper

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Plate Ten, from Petit Traite de Morale

Plate Ten, from Petit Traite de Morale

1968 · Etching on white Japanese paper

WW-1968-135696
The Bat

The Bat

1968 · Etching in black and white on brown laid paper

WW-1968-060562
Notes for New Justine, from Petit Traite de Morale

Notes for New Justine, from Petit Traite de Morale

1968 · Etching on white Japanese paper

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Plate Eight, from Petit Traite de Morale

Plate Eight, from Petit Traite de Morale

1968 · Etching on white Japanese paper

WW-1968-135697