"Published to accompany the exhibition Man Ray Portraits at the National Portrait Gallery, London, from 7 February to 27 May 2013, the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh, from 22 June to 8 ...
Incredibly this is the first major museum exhibition of Ray’s portraits. It starts with a small, but telling image: Marcel Duchamp in profile in 1916, looking rather monk-like in severe chiaroscuro.
If, in the early 1920s, you happened to walk into Shakespeare and Company, the legendary bookstore and lending library established in Paris after World War I by the American expatriate Sylvia Beach, ...
Image Size: 11 x 8.5 inches 16 x 20 inches; 14 x 11 14 x 16 ...
In this exquisite volume, published in association with London’s National Portrait Gallery and featuring an introduction by Marina Warner, the 200-plus portraits by Man Ray (1890–1976) share a ...
Man Ray's “Le Violon d'Ingres” (1924), one of the most reproduced images of the last century, could also become the most expensive photograph ever sold at auction. Born in Philadelphia in 1890 under ...
This collection is open for research. Access to original papers requires an appointment and is limited to the Archives' Washington, D.C. Research Center. The Archives of American Art makes its ...
Alias Man Ray: The Art of Reinvention, Jewish Museum, New York, NY (solo) Man Ray: African Art through the Modernist Lens, Phillips Collection, Washington, DC; University of Virginia Art Museum, ...
Man Ray was the ultimate networker. From the time he was twenty-three years old, when he asked Alfred Stieglitz to sit for a painted portrait, he had an uncanny knack for befriending important people.
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