Quick Search
Select Language

Select a Language

Close
Afrikaans
Chinese
Czech
Danish
Dutch
English
Finnish
French
German
Greek
Italian
Japanese
Norwegian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Spanish
Swedish
Bookmark and Share
login | contact
Peter Nahum
43A Store Street
London
London
WC1E 7DB
England

Telephone +44 (0)20-7637 0254
Fax +44 (0)20-7637 0987
Website www.leicestergalleries.com

MAN RAY Also known as EMMANUEL RADNITZKY (1890-1976) - Receive artist alerts » - More items from this artist »

Marjorie Seabrook wearing a Silver Collar; A Silver Collar attributed to Jean-Charles Worth (c. 1930 USA)
Reference no. 11142
Marjorie Seabrook wearing a Silver Collar; A Silver Collar attributed to Jean-Charles Worth

Medium

Two gelatin silver prints on photographic paper

Signed/Inscribed/Dated

Necklace attributed to the fashion designer Jean-Charles Worth

Dimensions

5.70cm wide    8.40cm high    (2.24 inches wide  3.31 inches high)

Provenance

The artist
Estate of Juliet Man Ray to 1995

Exhibition History

Tate, International Arts and Culture, Jan/Feb 2003, Issue 3, Pornography, Man Ray Laid Bare, pages18-19

Description / Expertise

Living in Paris, Man Ray earned a living as professional fashion and portrait photographer of the Parisian artists between the wars and intellectual elite: André Breton, James Joyce, T. S. Eliot, Arnold Schoenberg, Henri Matisse, Ernst Artaud and Ernest Hemingway, to name a few.

In his more personal life however, the life in which he frequented the parties of William Seabrook, diabolist, fetishist and recreational cannibal, his photographs convey the unashamed raw sexuality of the circles in which he moved, a world where naked girls were chained to the stairs during dinner. Unblinking, Man Ray snapped a succession of Seabrook's tableaux vivants and in these two photographs, he represents the high silver collar with studs designed at the request of William Seabrook for his wife Marjorie. The collar was designed to please his penchant for fetishism and, according to Man Ray's autobiography: was to follow the line of the chin thereby impending movement and forcing the head to be held up high.(1)

Through William Seabrook, Man Ray met his mistress and muse Alice Pin, known as `Kiki de Montparnasse' in 1921. Man Ray snapped hundreds of portraits of Kiki and many of his first `rayograph' images were of her. Man Ray's rayograph technique involved placing objects (in Kiki's case body parts) directly on photographic paper and exposing them to the light. Man Ray's imaginative energies led to the development of many new techniques and he dubbed himself a fautegrapher, a manipulator of straight photography.


1. Man Ray, Self Portrait, 1988, page 156