Through an examination of surrealist photographs, objects, exhibitions, activities, and writings, the essays in Twilight Visions, the beautifully illustrated companion volume to the exhibition of the same name, portray the French capital as a city in the process of metamorphosis-in a kind of twilight state. The Bureau of Surrealist Research, the major Surrealist exhibitions, and the photographs of Paris by Brassai, Andre Kertesz, Ilse Bing, Germaine Krull, and Man Ray, among others, all reflect the tumultuous social and cultural transformations occurring in Paris in the 1920s and 30s. Juxtaposing the strange with the familiar, they seek to break down repressive hierarchies. At the same time, they represent a desire to change the world through experimental activities. Introduced by Therese Lichtenstein, with essays by Therese Lichtenstein, Julia Kelly, Colin Jones, and Whitney Chadwick, this absorbing volume considers the social, aesthetic, and political stances of the Surrealists as they probed hidden aspects of the commonplace and blurred the boundaries between dreams and reality, subjectivity and objectivity.
Copub: Frist Center for the Visual Arts
Twilight Visions Surrealism and Paris
About the Book
Reviews
“Broad in its perspective but acute in its examinations, Twilight Visions shows us not only how hard the Surrealists worked but how their love for the city necessitated their psychic separation from the tragic course it was taking.”—On the Seawall
"Many photographs in [the catalogue to] this absorbing show . . . set up poetic contrasts between the new and the old.”—New York Times“From Paris and twilight photography to exhibitions of exotica and the 'savages'—to say nothing of gendered desire—this four-cornered exploration of the great surrealist epoch is enormously enhanced by extraordinary imagery and extensive notes.”—Mary Ann Caws, author of The Surrealist Look