Nouveaux Contes de Fées (New Fairy Tales)

Nouveaux Contes de Fées (New Fairy Tales)

Joseph CornellWW-1948-013904
1948·Box construction·32.1 × 26.1 × 15 cm (12 5/8 × 10 1/4 × 5 7/8 in.)

<p>This box, like so many of Cornell’s constructions, elicits multiple associations. The glazed front of the box is in fact a hinged door, opening like a medicine cabinet or an old-fashioned bookcase. The neat, gridlike compartments contain tiny boxes, which are like miniature keepsake containers or perhaps jewel boxes, an impression enhanced by the pink velvet interior. Each is pasted over with pages cut from a French book or journal, whose engraved illustrations and typeface both suggest nineteenth-century text. We are invited to link these now yellowing fragments of the text to the title <em>Nouveaux Contes de fees</em>, which is pasted in the top left and right corners of the door frame, invoking the title page in a book of fairy tales.</p> <p>The box was designed as a kind of toy to be played with, for the little boxes inside can be rearranged at will. Cornell’s choice of a French publication with which to cover them, together with the images, evokes French novels, which at the time to which the illustrations belong could signify the illicit and the erotic, and were considered unsuitable reading for young ladies. Although this is belied by the title, an aura of the secretive remains. This work is most closely related to Cornell‘s <em>Untitled (Paul and Virginia)</em> of c. 1946–48 (Chicago, Bergman family; see New York 1980-82, pl. IX), which similarly combines engravings and pages of text with mysterious stacks of tiny, closed boxes. In the latter, Cornell used pages from an English edition of Bernardin de Saint-Pierre’s <em>Paul et Virginie</em> (1789) together with engravings that originally accompanied the Curmer edition of 1838. This hugely successful tragic love story of the Romantic era may well have had an additional appeal for Cornell because it was set in the New world. The austere, grid structure of Nouveaux Contes de fees, which is emphasized by the simple, geometric shapes of the boxes and is related to Cornell’s Dovecote series, is in striking contrast to the romantic and rather sugary images.</p> <p>— Entry, Dawn Ades, <em>Surrealist Art: The Lindy and Edwin Bergman Collection at the Art Institute of Chicago</em>, 1997, p.48-49.</p>

Catalogue

Year
1948
Dimensions
32.1 × 26.1 × 15 cm (12 5/8 × 10 1/4 × 5 7/8 in.)

Artist

Joseph Cornell
Joseph Cornell

Printmaking

A leading 20th century American artist and a pioneer of assemblage art, Joseph Cornell has become most well known for his “shadow boxes,” a series of works made from found objects and raw materials that are constructed in such a way as to illustrate narrative surreal, even fantastical scenes. His many variable interests, which ranged from Surrealism to opera to Romantic literature, deeply influenced his work, leading to allegorical and personal memory themed objects. Surrealism specifically was significant to his artistic style, with the method of juxtaposing objects and subjects in surprising combinations featuring heavily across his oeuvre.

Nyack, NY, USA

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Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1948
Dimensions
32.1 × 26.1 × 15 cm (12 5/8 × 10 1/4 × 5 7/8 in.)
Watts ID
WW-1948-013904

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified

Artist

Joseph Cornell

Joseph Cornell

Printmaking

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