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Tuesday, September 16, 2025 |
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Museo d'Arte della Provincia di Nuoro Presents Man Ray: Unconcerned but not Indifferent |
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Man Ray: Noire et Blanche, 1936, Black and White Transpare. © Man Ray Trust.
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NUORO.- The Man Ray: Unconcerned But Not Indifferent exhibition comprises drawings, photos, paintings and sculptures from the Man Ray Trust collection in Long Island, New York. The Man Ray Trust collection has never gone on show before. In juxtaposing Man Rays artistic works, tools, documents, objects and pictures which gave the artist his inspiration, the exhibition creates a distinctive setting allowing visitors to experience and enjoy his wide-ranging artistic work.
The Man Ray Trust collection
After his death in 1976 Man Rays estate passed into the hands of his wife, Juliet, who was joined by her brothers in setting up the Man Ray Trust to preserve and promote the artists legacy. Part of the estate was donated to the French national museums, while the trust selected artworks, objects, documents and personal items for the American collection designed to provide a comprehensive overview of Man Rays creative period spanning over 60 years.
The trust has so far catalogued over 2,000 works and confirmed their authenticity. However, research work into all the facets of the collection has not yet been completed. Man Ray: Unconcerned But Not Indifferent is the first exhibition to provide a comprehensive insight into the collection. The unique feature of the trusts collection is that it encompasses items from all Man Rays creative periods, including little-known early works, documents from his private life, sketches for large-scale works and their documentation as well as numerous masterpieces. As was stated in an article about the trust in the magazine ArtNews in June 2002, the collection is perfect.
The exhibition
The inscription on Man Rays gravestone Unconcerned But Not Indifferent was chosen as the title of the exhibition. Comprising over 300 exhibits, it is the first of its kind to relate Man Rays artistic works to the objects and images from which he derived his inspiration his bowler hat and walking stick, items from the shelves of his studio in Rue de Ferou in Paris, his collection of erotic photographs and the objects he used for the camera-less photographic technique he called rayography.
Profiting from the abundance of material available in the Man Ray Trust, the exhibition looks at the development of numerous motifs from sketches up to the masterpiece and shows the occasional use Man Ray made of photographic material for paintings and works of graphic art. The exhibition also gives visitors an opportunity to form a picture of Man Rays life and his creative processes. Among the objects on display are personal items, such as pieces of jewellery that Man Ray made for his wife Juliet, private letters, drawings and manuscripts, including two early drafts of Man Rays autobiography, a formula for photographic chemicals and a patent application for a magnetic chess set. Also on show are documents never exhibited before, which Man Ray used as source material for his paintings and prints, as well as proofs containing comments Man Ray made for himself and his printers. These exhibits are assigned to the finished works to which they refer, thus offering a new insight into Rays life and artistic work.
The Unconcerned But Not Indifferent exhibition has been arranged in accordance with Man Rays four creative periods: New York (18901921), Paris (19211940), Los Angeles (19401951) and Paris (19501976). It begins with New York and a collection of proofs from Man Rays personal card files, in which he kept a record of his early works. These card files, the originals of which were stolen from Man Rays studio after his death and have never reappeared, were the subject of considerable controversy and have never been exhibited before. Wherever possible they are assigned to the works they document. Among the items on display from Man Rays years in Paris are the records of his own works and those of other artists, including Duchamp, Picasso, Miro and Leger, as well as a little book of Rousseaus work that he produced. It was through Rousseaus work that Man Ray learned to become a photographer, thus enabling him to gain entry to the Paris art world in the 1920s. Most of these works are likewise unknown.
The exhibition contains numerous works from each of the creative periods in Man Rays life. Many of the works on display are well known, but have not been seen in public since his death. Thorough research in the trusts non-catalogued stocks has made it possible for the exhibition to show for the first time a selection from the following hitherto unknown series of works:
Photographic plates from Les Mains Libres with traces of Man Rays cutting, dated 1936 and 1937.
documentary footage from France in the 1920s.
A hitherto unknown document of Marcel Duchamps Large Glass.
Contact prints with traces of Man Rays cutting from all his creative periods, black-and-white Polaroid prints from the early 1960s.
A collection of framed colour slides from the time Man Ray experimented with colour photography.
A joint project by Man Ray und Max Ernst consisting of four frottages.
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