The medium of Leonora Carrington
Title | The medium of Leonora Carrington PDF eBook |
Author | Catriona McAra |
Publisher | Manchester University Press |
Pages | 178 |
Release | 2022-11-29 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 1526161222 |
Before her death, the artist and writer Leonora Carrington (1917–2011) had already garnered a cult following, with numerous creative people making the pilgrimage to meet her at her home in Mexico City. Since then, her fame has only increased. Thinking across contemporary art media, this book demonstrates how Carrington has posthumously become a medium in her own right, critically haunting the creative intellectuals who met or knew her. It explores the work of a remarkable variety of individuals and organisations, including the artists Lucy Skaer, Samantha Sweeting and Lynn Lu, the actress Tilda Swinton, the novelists Chloe Aridjis and Heidi Sopinka and the ensemble Double Edge Theatre. This long-awaited study provides essential reading for both new and established members of the burgeoning Carrington fan club.
Leonora Carrington
Title | Leonora Carrington PDF eBook |
Author | Susan L. Aberth |
Publisher | Lund Humphries Publishers Limited |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2010 |
Genre | Magic in art |
ISBN | 9781848220560 |
Reprint. Paperback edition originally published: 2010.
The Complete Stories of Leonora Carrington
Title | The Complete Stories of Leonora Carrington PDF eBook |
Author | Leonora Carrington |
Publisher | New York Review of Books |
Pages | 234 |
Release | 2017-04-28 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 0997366648 |
“Complete Stories, a collection of Carrington’s published and unpublished short stories—many newly translated from their original French and Spanish—is a terrific introduction to her bizarre, dreamlike worlds.” —Carmen Maria Machado, NPR Surrealist writer and painter Leonora Carrington (1917–2011) was a master of the macabre, of gorgeous tableaus, biting satire, roguish comedy, and brilliant, effortless flights of the imagination. Nowhere are these qualities more ingeniously brought together than in the works of short fiction she wrote throughout her life. Published to coincide with the centennial of her birth, The Complete Stories of Leonora Carrington collects for the first time all of her stories, including several never before seen in print. With a startling range of styles, subjects, and even languages (several of the stories are translated from French or Spanish), The Complete Stories captures the genius and irrepressible spirit of an amazing artist’s life.
Down Below
Title | Down Below PDF eBook |
Author | Leonora Carrington |
Publisher | New York Review of Books |
Pages | 113 |
Release | 2017-04-18 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 1681370611 |
A stunning work of memoir and an unforgettable depiction of the brilliance and madness by one of Surrealism's most compelling figures In 1937 Leonora Carrington—later to become one of the twentieth century’s great painters of the weird, the alarming, and the wild—was a nineteen-year-old art student in London, beautiful and unapologetically rebellious. At a dinner party, she met the artist Max Ernst. The two fell in love and soon departed to live and paint together in a farmhouse in Provence. In 1940, the invading German army arrested Ernst and sent him to a concentration camp. Carrington suffered a psychotic break. She wept for hours. Her stomach became “the mirror of the earth”—of all worlds in a hostile universe—and she tried to purify the evil by compulsively vomiting. As the Germans neared the south of France, a friend persuaded Carrington to flee to Spain. Facing the approach “of robots, of thoughtless, fleshless beings,” she packed a suitcase that bore on a brass plate the word Revelation. This was only the beginning of a journey into madness that was to end with Carrington confined in a mental institution, overwhelmed not only by her own terrible imaginings but by her doctor’s sadistic course of treatment. In Down Below she describes her ordeal—in which the agonizing and the marvelous were equally combined—with a startling, almost impersonal precision and without a trace of self-pity. Like Daniel Paul Schreber’s Memoirs of My Nervous Illness, Down Below brings the hallucinatory logic of madness home.
The Invisible Painting
Title | The Invisible Painting PDF eBook |
Author | Gabriel Weisz Carrington |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2023-05-23 |
Genre | |
ISBN | 9781526169648 |
In this memoir, Gabriel Weisz Carrington, son of the renowned Surrealist artist Leonora Carrington, draws on remembered conversations and events to demythologise his mother and declare her not an icon or a goddess but, first and foremost, an artist.
The Hearing Trumpet
Title | The Hearing Trumpet PDF eBook |
Author | Leonora Carrington |
Publisher | New York Review of Books |
Pages | 225 |
Release | 2021-01-05 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 1681374641 |
An old woman enters into a fantastical world of dreams and nightmares in this surrealist classic admired by Björk and Luis Buñuel. Leonora Carrington, painter, playwright, and novelist, was a surrealist trickster par excellence, and The Hearing Trumpet is the witty, celebratory key to her anarchic and allusive body of work. The novel begins in the bourgeois comfort of a residential corner of a Mexican city and ends with a man-made apocalypse that promises to usher in the earth’s rebirth. In between we are swept off to a most curious old-age home run by a self-improvement cult and drawn several centuries back in time with a cross-dressing Abbess who is on a quest to restore the Holy Grail to its rightful owner, the Goddess Venus. Guiding us is one of the most unexpected heroines in twentieth-century literature, a nonagenarian vegetarian named Marian Leatherby, who, as Olga Tokarczuk writes in her afterword, is “hard of hearing” but “full of life.”
The House of Fear
Title | The House of Fear PDF eBook |
Author | Leonora Carrington |
Publisher | Virago Press |
Pages | 216 |
Release | 1988 |
Genre | Short stories in English, 1900-1945 - Texts |
ISBN | 9781853810480 |
Five short stories, a novella, and an autobiographical account of the author's descent into madness following the incarceration of Max Ernst, the artist with whom Carrington lived, in a concentration camp during World War II.