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Artworks
Man Ray
Close-up, Fold-up, 1963collage, paper and pinheads15 x 11 in (38 x 28 cm)
framed: 26 1/4 x 22 3/8 x 1 7/8 in (66.7 x 56.8 x 4.8 cm)Exhibitions
David Nolan Gallery, New York, Enrico Baj: Alter Ego and Other Hypotheses (April 18 - May 31, 2024)
Musée du Luxembourg, Paris, Man Ray et le mode (September 23, 2020 - January 17, 2021)
Musée Cantini, Marseille, Man Ray et la mode (November 8, 2019 - March 8, 2020)
Gió Marconi, Milan, I campi magnetici, curated by Cecilia Alemani (May 4 - July 19, 2019)
Fondazione Antonio Mazzotta, Milan, Man Ray (September 13, 1998 - January 24, 1999)
Wilhelm Lehmbruck Museum, Duisburg, Man Ray (May 3 - June 30, 1998)
Galerie der Stadt, Stuttgart, Man Ray (January 22 - April 13, 1998)
Venice Design Art Gallery, Venice (March 20, 1993)
Literature
Man Ray, Mazzotta, Milan 1998 (illustrated p. 257)Publications
Man Ray is well-known for his multimedia contributions to Dada and Surrealism. Close-up, Fold-up (1963) most likely has roots in Man Ray’s early silhouettes, which stem from photography he produced in the early part of his career. This particular work is a visual game, exhibiting strong Surrealist and Dadaist tendencies and rich with many visual and physiological coats of meaning.
Close-up, Fold-up demonstrates the intelligence and playfulness that is so original and groundbreaking about Man Ray. He evidently appropriates his famous The Rope Dancer Accompanies Herself with Her Shadows (1916), held by MoMA, as a source in this work. The collage of the sewing kit against the silhouetted figure harkens back to the artist’s interest in dancers and their shadows, as does the play with language in the title – the title has a rhythmic, onomatopoeic quality to it, functioning almost as a visual pun. Additionally, the mechanistic aspect of Close-up, Fold-up was inspired by his close friends Francis Picabia and Marcel Duchamp in the 1910s and 1920s. The thread hanging from the center set of needles adds a further sense of movement, along with the silver needle threader positioned below it. The use of the sewing machine in Man Ray’s work greatly influenced his successors, like René Magritte.
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