Alison Jacques and Marianne Boesky are pleased to co-present Murmurs, a solo exhibition of works by
Dorothea Tanning curated in the distinctive architecture of Marianne Boesky Gallery at 118 E. 64th
Street.
This exhibition was organized in collaboration with the Estate of Dorothea Tanning and its beneficiary,
the Destina Foundation. The Dorothea Tanning Foundation is also acknowledged for its dedicated efforts to
preserve the artist’s legacy. We are especially grateful to J. D. McClatchy, the eminent poet and literary critic and
a dear friend of Tanning’s who has written a text for the exhibition. His appreciation of Tanning’s reading of
poetry provides invaluable insight into the work of the artist, whose entire oeuvre may be seen as poetry.
The paintings, watercolors, drawings, collages and objects included range from 1960 – 2005, and were chosen
from the artist’s personal collection. This selection offers a view of some of the “mythical echoes”
found in Tanning’s work. Like ancient myths and legends, these works depict figures in moments of
euphoria, despair, love, seduction, jealousy, conflict, longing, delirium and reverie.
Tanning first achieved recognition as a Surrealist painter in New York in the 1940’s, and later in Paris in
the 1950’s. During the 1960’s, her paintings transitioned from dream-like scenes and portraits of the
subconscious into abstract and fractured imagery that in some respects delved more deeply into a
Surrealist approach. “I was reassured in the belief that there are realities that have nothing to do with
logic; and that diving into the subconscious—I call it subconscious—is the way to find them”.
Murmurs, a pivotal work for which the show is named, was painted in 1976, at the midpoint of her career
and the year in which her husband, the artist Max Ernst, died. As she explained, this work depicts the
artist cradled within a space she created for her own personal mythologies. Not long after Ernst’s death,
she left France and returned to New York, where she worked through the late 1970’s and 80’s, resuming a
more figural representation. Canvases like Hail, Delirium! (1979), Reality (1973-83), Heartless (1980), and
the monumental On Avalon (1987), demonstrate her lifelong efforts to express archetypal emotions and
experiences.
In her later years in New York, Tanning turned her attention to her own writing, and by the time of her
death in 2012 at the age of 101, she had become an accomplished poet, ultimately publishing two poetry
collections. With a lifelong interest in poetry and literature, Tanning named several of her works directly after
mythological subjects: Chiens de Cythère (Dogs of Cythera) (1963), La Chienne et sa muse (The Dog and Her
Muse) (1964), Europa (1967), Drawing for Aura (1978), Maenad III (1986), and Dionysos SOS (1987-89). Other
works, though not named directly after a particular myth, evoke the type of dramatic narratives found in them:
women paired with would-be seducers in the guise of animals, or mothers protecting children from the perils of
unknown forces. Her series of “frieze” drawings, with figures dancing and coupling with the abandon of
Dionysian rites also refers to the narrative convention found in Classical architecture.
The echoes of myths and legends in Tanning’s work are also explored in this exhibition through poetry,
with examples of poems that were especially meaningful to the artist. Many of the poets Tanning admired
offered different versions of traditional mythical stories, and wrote on the cultural role mythmaking has
had in helping to understand and communicate universal truths. The poems that accompany the works in
the exhibition were found quoted amongst Tanning’s writings, letters, and journals, or underlined and
bookmarked in the many volumes of her personal library. This selection was edited by J. D. McClatchy.
Dorothea Tanning (b. 1910, Galesburg, IL; d. 2012, New York, NY) has had over eighty solo exhibitions
and participated in hundreds of group shows. Her work is owned by some of the most prestigious
museums in the world, such as the Philadelphia Museum of Art; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Whitney
Museum of American Art, New York; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Dallas Museum of Art; Moderna
Museet, Stockholm; Centre Pompidou, Paris; and Tate Collection, London.