Rare Contact Prints from Man Ray’s Archive

© The Man Ray Trust / ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London
© The Man Ray Trust / ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London
Study for Cover: Photographs by Man Ray, 1920-1934, 1933

A rare collection of darkroom contact prints from Man Ray’s archive will be on display — for the first time ever — in an exhibition slated to run from February 21st through March 28th at Atlas Gallery in London.

Once belonging to Man Ray’s darkroom printer, Pierre Gassman, these prints reveal a subtlety that is often lost or overlooked in the prolific Surrealist’s work. Seen in their earliest, un-manipulated form, these still lifes and early examples of Man Ray’s portraiture evince a casual sensibility — a willingness to engage in trial and error — that feels, somehow, refreshingly at odds with the American-born modernist’s more widely known, finished works.

A central figure in both the Dada and Surrealist movements, Man Ray (born Emmanuel Radnitzky in 1890 in Philadelphia) created portraits of his contemporaries — often hugely influential cultural figures — including James Joyce, Picasso, Ava Gardner and Coco Chanel. Some of those portraits will be on display, publicly, for the first time at the Atlas show.


Man Ray: Contacts is on display at Atlas Gallery in London through March 28th. 


Related Topics: , , , , ,

Latest Posts

Have a Nice Day, Ocala, FL, 2012, from the project, 'Florida: Eden Isle'.

The Myth and Mystery of the Sunshine State

Florida isn't like other places. In fact, in some ways, Florida isn't even like Florida. The work of David Walter Banks illustrates much of the Floridian myth, deepening the mystery of the Sunshine State's singularly odd appeal.

Read More
Elaine Mayes Autolandscape, Utah 1971

Autolandscapes of the American Road

Zhang Yaxin—Courtesy See+ Gallery, Beijing, and Stephen Bulger Gallery, Toronto

Zhang Yaxin: Photographing Chairman Mao’s Model Operas