Surreal Spaces: The Life and Art of Leonora Carrington

Joanna Moorhead. Thames & Hudson. (224p) ISBN: 9780500025512
Surreal Spaces: The Life and Art of Leonora Carrington

Surreal Spaces: The Life and Art of Leonora Carrington

First of all I have to give a huge thanks to Thames & Hudson for sending me a copy of this to read and review.

I’d only recently found Leonora Carrington through the book, The Tarot of Leonora Carrington, and was immediately gripped by her work.

This book, Surreal Spaces, is a wonderfully written and researched monograph on her life and works. Looking into what took her down certain roads and exploring her art during each of these periods.

What sets it apart from other art monographs though is the personal nature of the relationship between the author and artist, Joanna Moorhead also going on a journey of discovery of this woman who is related to her but not immediately know and has to be revisited both as family and artist.

I took an Art History degree and was fascinated by Surrealism but the only names we were ever told were Breton and Dali, and the feud between these to men, but it comes as no real surprise to find that women who were seen as great artists at the time were written out of HIStory once more.

Another woman who’s skills and artistry is now only being rediscovered after her death tells why we need more book like this one exploring the strength, passion, and imagination of Leonora Carrington.

What I really liked most about this book is that the familial link gave what could have been an impersonal, yet important, exploration of an artists life energy and warmth.

This is a great read, well set out and well researched with fascinating historical context of a brilliant artist, and I really need to see her work in real life rather than reproduction soon.

If you have any interest in women’s art, art history, or surrealism this is a must have book.


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The Tarot of Leonora Carrington

Susan Aberth, Tere Arcq. RM Verlag SL . (168p) ISBN: 9788417975999 ★★★★★

The Tarot of Leonora Carrington

The Tarot of Leonora Carrington

I was forwarded the Guardian article about this by a friend and immediately went down a rabbit hole, trying to find out everything I could about Leonora Carrington who I had never heard of previously.

After all that digging around I just had to get the book as soon as it came out and brilliantly enough the release coincided closely enough with Christmas for it to be one of my presents!

From the cover to the end this book is so opulent, glistening in gold, shining in silver, and all on excellent quality paper making it an object of desire within itself.

Once you start reading and finding all about the occult life of Leonora Carrington though you are transported to another time, a brilliant introduction, touching opening essay from her son, then onto the meat of the book, her work.

This initially explores her work and the influences from the occult learnings of various groups in the 19th and 20th century, including The Golden Dawn, mesoamerican myths and culture, Celtic gods and goddesses, feminism, Jungian theory, and explored this amalgam through examples of Leonora’s works.

It also talks about her relationship with other artists who used the subconscious and the occult as part of their practice and shows her influence on them, placing her firmly within the canon of surrealism and at the same time making you wonder how she was so firmly hidden for so long.

We then move on to the cards of the Major Arcana themselves and look at each one in turn. Each cards symbolism is explored in relation to traditional forms and how this was adapted to be significant to Leonora’s idea of divination from the card.

Some diverged greatly, with different colours and icons used whilst others stayed mainly the same though with important changes to fit into the mythology of the cards that were being developed.

A stunning book from start to finish, an object to lust after, and a stepping off point for me to discover more about Leonora Carrington.


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