Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Soon she was introduced to art works of various styles eg Expressionism, Fauvism and Cubism. Meret disliked the concept of “feminine art” and adopted Jung's ideal, “androgynous creativity”. And Paul Klee’s work in the 1929 retrospective at Kunsthalle Basel provided another strong abstractionist influence
In 1932 at 18, Oppenheim moved to Paris from Basel and moved into the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Her first Paris studio in Montparnasse Hotel was where she created paintings & drawings. Then she met Hans Arp and Alberto Giacometti who visited her studio to saw her work. They invited her to participate in Paris’ Surrealist exhibition in Salon des Surindépendants in Oct-Nov.
Happy to pose for photographers, Man Ray’s popular photo series depicted Meret’s personal stance on femininity, and her care in exposing it. In his photos, she posed gracefully eg Meret Oppenheim at the Printing Wheel (1933).
Museum of Fine Arts Houston
dailyartmagazine
Oppenheim later met André Breton and socialised at the Café de la Place Blanche with Surrealists. She experimented with Surrealism, seeking approval for her lifestyle. She was sceptical of any concrete ideology, and Surrealism allowed her to experiment. But whereas other Surrealists used dreams to unlock the subconscious, Oppenheim used art and dreams in their subconsciousness forms. Meeting Breton and his friends, Oppenheim's circle joined other Surrealists eg Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst, Francis Picabia and Man Ray. Man Ray was asked to exhibit her best work at NY’s Museum of Modern Art (1936), hanging alongside Paris and New York artists, including Salvador Dalí and Giacommetti.
In 1936, Meret Oppenheim had her first solo exhibition at Basel’s Galerie Schulthess. Her best known artwork was Object-Breakfast in Fur (1936), consisting of a teacup, saucer and spoon, covered with fur from a Chinese gazelle. The hollow round cup suggested wealthy female genitalia; the phallic shaped spoon further eroticised the hairy object. Meret was encouraged by a conversation she had about fur items with Pablo Picasso and his lover Dora Maar in Café Deux Magots. Object-Breakfast in Fur was quickly bought by Alfred Barr for the MoMA New York collection and was included in the museum's 1st Surrealist exhibition, Fantastic Art: Dada and Surrealism (1936-7).
In 1936, Meret Oppenheim had her first solo exhibition at Basel’s Galerie Schulthess. Her best known artwork was Object-Breakfast in Fur (1936), consisting of a teacup, saucer and spoon, covered with fur from a Chinese gazelle. The hollow round cup suggested wealthy female genitalia; the phallic shaped spoon further eroticised the hairy object. Meret was encouraged by a conversation she had about fur items with Pablo Picasso and his lover Dora Maar in Café Deux Magots. Object-Breakfast in Fur was quickly bought by Alfred Barr for the MoMA New York collection and was included in the museum's 1st Surrealist exhibition, Fantastic Art: Dada and Surrealism (1936-7).
Meret Oppenheim's My Nursemaid, 1936
Surrealist sculpture high-heeled shoes, bound by string & on a metal platter.
Moderna Museet, Stockholm
Forbes
Moderna Museet, Stockholm
Forbes
In 1937 Oppenheim returned to Basel, struggling with her artistic development. She usually worked episodically and sometimes destroyed her own work. So she took a career-break in 1939, after a Paris Exhibition at Galerie René Drouin with Max Ernst.
Meret Oppenheim: My Exhibition will move to the Menil Collection in Houston Texas (till Sep 2022), before moving to MoMA in New York (from Oct 2022). The 200 objects started from her smart 1930s Paris debut: from abstract works to jewellery, paintings, sculptures and collages in Bern. See the catalogue.
And see Meret’s furniture. Her whimsical Table with Bird’s Feet based on birds legs, on display at a fantasy furniture exhibition at Place Vendôme in 1939, was praised by the leaders of Italian design in Milan, and has now become an model of stylish interior design.
Bird Feed table, 1939
1stdibs
When her father was unemployed in 1939, Meret needed to do conservation for financial and emotional relief. She returned to Basel, training as an art conservator to ensure her financial stability. But this marked a creative crisis that lasted for years. Although she had some contact with her Parisian friends, she created little art and destroyed much of what she had. In 1949, Oppenheim married Wolfgang La Roche and moved with him to Bern.
In Basel she became a member of Gruppe 33 and participated in their shows in Kunstmuseum Basel. But Oppenheim was struggling and did not present any public art exhibitions till the 1950s. Then she reverted to with her new works to her original style and earlier creations. Oppenheim befriended the director of the Kunsthall Bern; his exhibitions helped her explore international arts.
In 1956, Oppenheim designed the costumes and masks for Picasso’s play Le Désir attrapé par la queue in Berne. In 1959, she organised a Spring Banquet in Bern for friends at which food was served on a naked woman. It caused controversy, with Oppenheim accused of treating the female body as dinner. With her permission, Andre Breton restaged the performance later that year at the opening of the Expos
In Basel she became a member of Gruppe 33 and participated in their shows in Kunstmuseum Basel. But Oppenheim was struggling and did not present any public art exhibitions till the 1950s. Then she reverted to with her new works to her original style and earlier creations. Oppenheim befriended the director of the Kunsthall Bern; his exhibitions helped her explore international arts.
In 1956, Oppenheim designed the costumes and masks for Picasso’s play Le Désir attrapé par la queue in Berne. In 1959, she organised a Spring Banquet in Bern for friends at which food was served on a naked woman. It caused controversy, with Oppenheim accused of treating the female body as dinner. With her permission, Andre Breton restaged the performance later that year at the opening of the Expos
ition internationale du Surrealisme, at the Galerie Cordier Paris. But Oppenheim felt her original aims were lost.
Surrealism was changing. In the 1960s Oppenheim felt she belonged with the younger, post-war generation and so she distanced herself from the older Surrealists. True to herself, she undertook fresh pictorial language and in 1968, had a solo exhibition at Galerie Martin Krebs, Bern. Her pieces were everyday items that alluded to female sexuality and exploitation by men, perhaps confronting life and death. In this intimate bronze sculpture (1977), folded layers ?referenced female curves.
Twist weave brooch by Meret Oppenheim, 1985
perfold
In 1982 Oppenheim won the Berlin Art Prize! That was the year that Meret Oppenheim: Defiance in the Face of Freedom was published, and she was commissioned to make a public fountain by Berlin's art commission. Her fountain was cast in 1983, receiving mixed reviews. In 1983 Oppenheim was in a touring exhibition through the Goethe Institute in Italy. In 1984 she had a solo exhibition in Kunsthalle Bern along with Musee d’Art Moderne in Paris. International recognition.. at last! She passed away in 1985.
In 1982 Oppenheim won the Berlin Art Prize! That was the year that Meret Oppenheim: Defiance in the Face of Freedom was published, and she was commissioned to make a public fountain by Berlin's art commission. Her fountain was cast in 1983, receiving mixed reviews. In 1983 Oppenheim was in a touring exhibition through the Goethe Institute in Italy. In 1984 she had a solo exhibition in Kunsthalle Bern along with Musee d’Art Moderne in Paris. International recognition.. at last! She passed away in 1985.
Meret Oppenheim: My Exhibition will move to the Menil Collection in Houston Texas (till Sep 2022), before moving to MoMA in New York (from Oct 2022). The 200 objects started from her smart 1930s Paris debut: from abstract works to jewellery, paintings, sculptures and collages in Bern. See the catalogue.






3 comments:
What a family Meret had!! Grandmother Lisa Wenger was an artist, publisher and writer; her father was a doctor specialising in psychoanalysis; mum Eva Wenger was a suffragette; her maternal aunt Ruth Wenger was a painter and trained singer; her sister Kristin was a painter.
Joe
and not only close family. Meret was closer to famous artist friends than anyone I know: Marcel Duchamp, Leonora Carrington, Max Ernst, Man Ray, Pablo Picasso, Dora Maar, Jean Arp, André Breton and Max Ernst. What a stunning list.
The full scope of Oppenheim’s six-decade career was largely unknown outside her native Switzerland, and many of the paintings, sculptures, assemblages, reliefs, jewellery designs, works on paper, and collages were on display in the US for the first time.
Prior to its MoMA presentation, the exhibition was shown at the Kunstmuseum Bern (2021–2022) and the Menil Collection, Houston (2022). This exhibition offered a rare opportunity to see Oppenheim’s output—from daring objects first displayed alongside those of the Surrealists in the 1930s, to painted collages that incorporate natural materials found in the Alpine landscape, to sculptures made of bronze and semi-precious stone—in all of its exuberant variety.
Meret Oppenheim, My Exhibition, 2022–2023
Buy the Exhibition Catalogue, Hardcover, 188 pages
https://store.moma.org/en-au/collections/only-at-moma
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