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Leonora CarringtonChapeau casque antique, c. 1955Gouache on paper41 x 32 cm
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Leonora CarringtonChapeau sport, c. 1955Gouache on paper41 x 32 cm
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Leonora CarringtonChapeau rouge, c. 1955Gouache on paper41 x 32 cm
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Leonora CarringtonChapeau mystère, c. 1955Gouache on paper41 x 32 cm
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Leonora CarringtonChapeau á la feuille at rose , c. 1955Gouache on paper41 x 32 cm
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Tali LennoxDevotion, 2023Oil on canvas30 x 40 cm
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Sophie von HellermannUntitled, 2023Acrylic on canvas180 x 230 cm
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Paula RegoGirl With Goat's Feet I, 2012Etching and aquatint22 x 28 cm11/50
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Paula RegoGirl With Goat's Feet II, 2012Etching and aquatint22 x 28 cm3/50
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Georg WilsonThe Gathering, 2023Oil on panel100 x 70 cm
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Paula TurminaHold it Twice, 2023Monoprint on velvet40 x 30 cm diptych
20 x 30 cm each
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Paula TurminaSattelized rotation, 2023Oil on canvas50 x 45 cm
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Alma BerrowFree of strife, 2023Earthenware40 x 100 cm
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Nooka ShepherdWyrd Night, 2023Oil on panel80 x 89 cm
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Ariane HughesFoot phobic (but suck my toes tho), 2023Oil on linen50 x 30 cm
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Bea BonafiniSulphur, 2023Oil pastel and watercolour on cork27.5 x 27.5 x 3 cm
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Bea BonafiniHear, 2023Oil pastel on cork25.5 x 27.5 x 3 cm
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Harriet GillettPlaces I seldom see, 2023Oil and spray paint on canvas15 x 10 cm
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Harriet GillettWith the day comes the dawn, 2023Oil and spray paint on linen160 x 130cm
LAMB Gallery is pleased to announce its upcoming exhibition Surrealism and Witchcraft. Running from 17 November – 20 December 2023, the group exhibition investigates the resonance of the witch figure in art history through the works of 11 female artists inspired by Surrealism. The works span from the beginnings of the movement to the present, particularly highlighting the witch’s feminist significance through pieces that ironically unravel the Freudian symbolism of these broom-riding women.
In the first half of the 20th century, when the post-war world was a chaotic blend of progress and loss, advances in medicine and psychology fostered a re-evaluation of the relationship between the mind and the body. In these conflicting contexts of devastation and development, André Breton and Sigmund Freud spearheaded a new philosophy, in which dreams and reality would resolve into a kind of new absolute truth. Rooted in the same exploration of the subconscious and experimentation with the irrational, Surrealism was born and remains popular today.
Although the movement has since been largely male dominated, women have long employed its practices to liberate the creative potential of their subconscious minds, with Mexico an early hive of female Surrealists including Frida Kahlo Leonora Carrington, Remedios Varo and more. Often drawing on the figure of the witch, the magical entity gradually became a vehicle for women artists to release the depth of their dreams and explore ideas of gender and sexuality.
In this vein, Leonora Carrington’s series of witch hats (c. 1955) is exhibited as a key departure point for the exhibition. The five gouaches were found within one of the portfolios of Leonor Fini, fellow Surrealist and Carrington’s longtime friend, at the time of her death. Born out of Fini’s 1952 commission to design a set of otherworldly hats in Paris, she enlisted Carrington as a collaborator and the project was to result in a joint show. Although the show was sadly never realised, the series of witch hats serves as a testament of both the close friendship between the two artists and their shared fascination with witchcraft.