• Home
  • About
  • Writing
  • [Cultured] Pearls
  • Contact
Menu

CultureZohn

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number

Your Custom Text Here

CultureZohn

  • Home
  • About
  • Writing
  • [Cultured] Pearls
  • Contact

Max Ernst, Francis Bacon and The Femme Fatale

May 12, 2021 Patricia Zohn
Screen Shot 2021-10-08 at 11.47.38 AM.png

In a Zoom offered by the Peggy Guggenheim collection this week on The Femme Fatale--first of three in a series on Myths, Muses and Models--this painting by Max Ernst was discussed, especially as an echo of a da Vinci at the Louvre, the Madonna and Saint Anne, and around its sexual implications (pre-Dorothea Tanning, first marriage). This is early Ernst, the Surrealist Ernst, before he came into his own, later more craggy style.

But to me, this work jumped out as a precursor to Francis Bacon. The erotic imagery felt so much like one of Bacon's central, torqued, tortured figures in a brilliant, empty background. I look forward to reading the new Bacon biography to see if he actually had the chance to see this work.


Max Ernst, The Kiss, 1927, Peggy Guggenheim Collection

In Fine Art Tags Max Ernst, Dorothea Tanning, Peggy Guggenheim
← Dreams of Ghost ForestA Dreamy Hannah Hoch Goes Up For Auction →