
Untitled
<p>The largely self-taught Yves Tanguy decided to become an artist around 1923, when he was inspired by a painting by Giorgio de Chirico that he saw in a shop window. Tanguy became interested in Surrealism a year later, after reading the periodical <em>La révolution surréaliste</em>. André Breton welcomed him into the Surrealist group in 1925. Inspired by the metaphysical qualities of de Chirico’s work, as well as the biomorphic forms of Jean Arp, Max Ernst, and Joan Miró, Tanguy quickly developed his own fantastic vocabulary of organic, amoeba-like shapes that populate mysterious, dreamlike settings.</p> <p>Tanguy painted this primordial landscape on a hinged wooden screen. Little information exists about the circumstances of the work’s making, but the artist probably intended it for a patron’s home, since many Surrealists were interested in the decorative arts and produced folding screens, furniture, and other domestic objects. In this unusual example, although the screen retains the potential to close off the private sphere, it simultaneously opens up more intimate dreams and fantasies to the outside world.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1928
- Medium
- Oil on wood
- Dimensions
- Two sets of four joined panels, each panel: 200.1 × 59.7 cm (78 3/4 × 23 1/2 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Yves Tanguy
Artist

Painting
Yves Tanguy was an American painter of French origin known for densely populated biomorphic landscapes rendered in oil, often depicting impossible terrains of undulating forms and spectral voids. His work, created between the 1920s and his death in 1955, occupied a singular space within Surrealism, eschewing the movement's reliance on recognizable dreamscapes in favor of purely invented anatomies and geologies. His compositions employ a narrow, luminous palette to render architectural organisms that seem to breathe and shift across barren horizons. Though associated with the Surrealist circle, his painting method was deliberate and architectural rather than automatic, building forms through precise layering and spatial recession.
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More by Yves Tanguy
Tailpiece from Un Poème dans chaque livre
1956 · Etching from an illustrated book with seven etchings (three with aquatint, one with aquatint, drypoint, engraving, and roulette), three drypoints (one with engraving), two aquatints, two woodcuts, one engraving, and one lithograph
Surrealist Composition with Smoking Container
1955 · Graphite, with smudging, on cream laid paper
Multiplication of the Arcs
1954 · Oil on canvas
Two Mechanical Figures
1954 · Pen and black ink, with white gouache, on cream wove paper
Untitled
1953 · Ink on paper
Thar
1952 · Gouache on gray wove paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Yves Tanguy
- Year
- 1928
- Medium
- Oil on wood
- Dimensions
- Two sets of four joined panels, each panel: 200.1 × 59.7 cm (78 3/4 × 23 1/2 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1928-013872
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





