Untitled (Plate 1)
Untitled (Plate 3)
Untitled (Plate 4)
Untitled (Plate 5)
Untitled (Plate 6)
Untitled (Plate 2)
Untitled (Plate 7)
Untitled (Plate 8)
Untitled (Plate 9)
1963
At
this
time...
An almost year-long bout with sciatica diminishes Dorothea Tanning’s studio activity. Finishes Chiens de Cythère (Dogs of Cythera) on canvas tacked to the rue de Lille dining room wall. In Huismes more visits by, among others, Georges Bataille, Jean Arp, Dominique de Menil. November assassination of President John F. Kennedy devastates all.
Lunatiques (Lunatics)
Deux mots (Two Words)
Chiens de Cythère (Dogs of Cythera)
Une lacune à combler (A Gap to Be Filled)
Untitled (“Pen and Wash Drawing”)
Orphans
Das Weisenhaus (Orphanotropium)
Dorothea Tanning and Max Ernst
1964
At
this
time...
Move from Huismes to Seillans, a hilltop village in Provence. The house, an ex-hotel called, unbelievably, La Dolce Vita, has plenty of rooms to paint in.
La Chienne et sa muse (The Dog and Her Muse)
Far From
In 3/4 Time
Untitled
Memoires d'un touriste (Memories)
Demain (Tomorrow)
Frontispiece for Demain (Tomorrow)
Untitled for Demain (Tomorrow)
1965
At
this
time...
Painting and duties, in Seillans, in Paris, even in New York. The paintings are prismatic. Meets Robert Penn Warren and Eleanor Clark, in residence at Magagnosc, near Grasse.
Pelote d'épingles pouvant servir de fétiche (Pincushion to Serve as Fetish)
To the Rescue