Jean Arp, Switzerland, 1947
About this artwork
This is one of the portrait studies of leading figures in Swiss cultural life which Miller made for a feature in the May 1947 issue of Vogue. Arp was a French artist born in Germany, who lived in Switzerland intermittently. He was associated with many revolutionary art movements of the first half of the twentieth century and was Co-founder of the Dada movement in Zurich in 1916. Beginning with her portrait of the artist Joseph Cornell in 1933 (GMA 4982), Miller had begun to photograph artists with their work in ways that appeared to merge the two. Here, one of Arp’s painted wooden reliefs hangs behind his head.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Lee MillerAmerican (1907 - 1977)
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title:Jean Arp, Switzerland, 1947
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date created:1947
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materials:Black and white photograph (posthumous print)
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measurements:Paper size: 36.00 x 30.00 cm; image size: 24.00 x 25.40 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased with help from the Patrons of the National Galleries of Scotland 2007
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accession number:GMA 4988
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gallery:
Lee Miller
Lee Miller
Miller had a most remarkable career and life. She was born in Poughkeepsie, New York, and worked as a model for Condé Nast, learning photography first through being a subject for the most important fashion photographers of her day. In 1929 she visited Paris for the second time and became the...