Claude Cahun (Photofile)
Claude Cahun (Photofile)
Claude Cahun (Photofile)
Claude Cahun (Photofile)
Claude Cahun (Photofile)
Claude Cahun (Photofile)
Claude Cahun (Photofile)
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Claude Cahun (Photofile)

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Claude Cahun (1894–1954), the chosen name of the artist Lucy Schwob, was best known in her lifetime as a writer but built up a remarkable body of photographic work that only came to prominence after her death.

Politically active and involved with a wide circle of artists and intellectuals, including the surrealists, Cahun followed her own rules in both life and art. She is best known for her strikingly staged self-portraits, in which she used costumes, makeup, and technical effects to tackle themes of identity and self-representation. Her love of symmetry, mirroring, repurposing, and retouching was also reflected in her approach to other styles of photography, including portraiture, photomontage, and still-life tableaux.

Whether working alone or in collaboration with her life partner, Marcel Moore (born Suzanne Malherbe), Claude Cahun was a pioneering figure in the aesthetics of modernity who never stopped crossing boundaries of gender and genre.

Francois Leperlier is a French writer, essayist, poet, philosopher, and art historian, known especially for his work on the surrealist writer and photographer Claude Cahun. He has dedicated a large part of his life’s work to the rehabilitation and recognition of Cahun’s creative works, having rediscovered her nearly forty years after her death in 1954.

Author: Claude Cahun (Author), Francois Leperlier (Introduction)
Publisher: Thames & Hudson
Pages: 144
Material: softcover
ISBN: 9780500297490
Dimensions: 13 × 19 cm