Nobody’s muse: Revisiting the art of Leonora Carrington

Shape-shifting creatures. Dreamscapes of greenery. Prancing hyenas and noble white horses.

These are just a few of the hallmarks of surrealist Leonora Carrington. 

The artist – who was born in 1917 in England and died in 2011 – was once on the periphery of the surrealist movement. But in the decade following her death, Ms. Carrington’s work has experienced a revival.

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For her unique vision, artist and writer Leonora Carrington is among a number of creative women being celebrated anew.

While her adopted homeland of Mexico has long embraced her art, the celebration of Ms. Carrington’s legacy has reached a crescendo in other parts of the world in recent years. Her reemergence follows a trend of increased attention to fellow women creators – including writers Eve Babitz and Lucia Berlin, musician Betty Davis, and abstract artist Hilma af Klint. Many of them dot TikTok lists highlighting “women artists you should know” and “recent obsessions.”

The 100th anniversary of the surrealist movement last year has also brought attention to often overlooked artists, such as Dora Maar and close Carrington friend Remedios Varo. 

In the case of Ms. Carrington, her “Les Distractions de Dagobert” (1945) sold for $28.5 million at Sotheby’s in 2024, cementing her status as the highest-selling female artist in British history. In the past decade, there have been exhibitions in Spain, Denmark, Ireland, England, and Mexico. Her first solo exhibition in New England – at Brandeis University’s Rose Art Museum – is on display until June 1, and then moves to the Katonah Museum of Art in New York. Her first solo museum show in Italy will open in Milan this fall, followed by an exhibition in Paris in 2026. A biopic is in the works, following the artist’s life in 1930s Paris before she fled to Mexico.

© Leonora Carrington / Arts Rights Society (ARS), New York

“Pastoral” (1950) is among the works included in “Leonora Carrington: Dream Weaver” at Brandeis University’s Rose Art Museum in Waltham, Massachusetts.

To those familiar with Ms. Carrington’s work, the increase in interest reflects a renewed attention to the surrealist movement – and to Ms. Carrington’s unique artistic vision.

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