Dorothea Tanning: Dog Artist

 

Dorothea_Tanning_Family_Portrait

 

Portrait de Famille, 1954

My idea for International Women's Day today was to feature several women dog artists from around the world. LACMA's current exhibition In Wonderland: The Surrealist Adventures of Women Artists in Mexico and the United States seemed like a good place to look for some. That's where I discovered Dorothea Tanning. And that's where I stopped looking.  Her 101 years of creating sums up everything I wanted to say about women and art and fearlessness and making choices and sacrifices.

I am embarrassed to say that I had never heard of her.   But she knew people weren't hearing about her the same way they were hearing about her husband, Max Ernst.  People weren't carving her name in history, even though they were living the same life.  She expressed this in a poem:

Many years ago today
I took a husband tenderly
This simple human gentle act
Seen as a hard decisive fact
By all who dote on category
Did stain my work indelibly
I don’t know why that is
For it has not stained his

The Daily Telegraph writes in her obituary, "It is, perhaps, no surprise that Dorothea Tanning consistently refused to have children and instead lavished her attention on Pekingese dogs." 

It is no surprise to me that her Pekingese dogs show up in her work.

Dorothea_tanning_dog_photo_collage

 

collage, no date

Dorothea_tanning_interior_with_sudden_joy

 

Interior with Sudden Joy, 1951

Dorothea_tanning_photograph_with_dog

 

Photograph of Dorothea Tanning and her dog by Lee Miller

Dorothea_tanning_katchina_and_her_soul

 

Katchina and her Soul, 1951

Dorothea_tanning_tableau_vivant

 

Tableau Vivant, 1954

Photo_max_ernst_with_dog_katchina

 

Max Ernst with Katchina by Dorothea Tanning

Dorothea_tanning_maternity

 

Maternity, 1946

 

Learn more about Dorothea Tanning's extraordinary life here.

 

Comments

2 responses to “Dorothea Tanning: Dog Artist”

  1. Rachel Miller (Petrovich) Avatar

    I remember we learned about Tanning in a college women in art history course. Her awareness at being overlooked because of her gender and status of “wife” really struck me at the time. As a wife and mother (of human and dog babies) myself now, I feel even more of a connection to what a strong sense of self she must have developed and what cultural restraints she battled on a daily basis to make art, to make HER life.
    Thanks so much for posting this. Esp. Tableau Vivant; I had not seen that one before and I love it.

  2. meredith Avatar
    meredith

    Yes, Thanks for this Moira. Wow. So powerful and inspirational.

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