SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- Gallery Wendi Norris presents Modern Milieu, featuring works by Leonora Carrington, Leonor Fini, Wolfgang Paalen, Alice Rahon, and Dorothea Tanning. Coinciding with the gallerys adjacent installation of twelve bronze sculptures by Max Ernst at Transamerica Pyramid Center, Modern Milieu showcases works by these five artists who were linked to Ernst, demonstrating the impact of his pathbreaking oeuvre on the practices of these artistsas well as their influence on himas they pushed the boundaries of modern art.
Carrington, Fini, Paalen, Rahon, and Tanning were, by varying degrees, associated with Ernst. Carrington lived with Ernst in the south of France, where the two artists transformed their rural Saint-Martin-dArdèche house into a total work of art, the remnants of which are currently on view at Transamerica Pyramid Center. Escaping war-torn France for the United States, Ernst met and later married Tanning, moving to Sedona, AZ. A dreamlike desert landscape she painted there, Rencontre (1952), depicts a fantastical vision of her natural surroundings as well as, possibly, the figure of Ernst himself. Fini, who famously disavowed the Surrealist movements leader, André Breton, was an inspiration behind some of the themes and imagery that Ernst developed throughout his career, notably her frequent depiction of the sphinx, a figure that appears in Ernsts oeuvre, including in his sculptures from Saint-Martin-dArdèche.
Works by Paalen and Rahon demonstrate the influence that the Americas had on both artists interests and visual language. Like Ernst, Paalen and Rahon left France at the outset of World War II, first traveling to the United States and Canada, before settling in Mexico where they expanded the horizons of the avant-gardeand Surrealism, in particularwhich until then had primarily been centered in European art circles. Paalen melded Eastern and Western artistic traditions in the monumental painting, Messagers des trois pôles (Messengers from Three Poles) (1949), a masterpiece of Dynaton art, the art movement he helped found in the Bay Area as a counterpoint to Surrealism.