Emmanuel Radnitzky (1890-1976) was born in Philadelphia, the son of Russian immigrants. On moving to Brooklyn in 1911, his father took the surname Ray and Emmanuel took the first name Man. After studying drawing, he met Marcel Duchamp in 1915, who brought him into the small circle of New York Dadaists. Frustrated at the failure of his 3rd exhibition at the Daniel Gallery NY, Man Ray settled in Paris and joined the Dada group, abandoning of painting.
Man Ray - Wooden Mannequin, 1925
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In the first instance, Man Ray entered fashion to finance his art, seeing fashion photography primarily as a mean of supporting his experimental artwork. When he moved from New York to Paris in 1921, he embarked upon various collaborations with the couturiers there including Vionnet, Lanvin, Chanel and Schiaparelli, to finance his studio, brushes and paint. But right from the outset, he resolved to exploit the potential for artistic expression within the context of commercial work. His first commission was for Paul Poiret, one of the city’s leading designers. Among the images from the session, the most famous are perhaps the striking portraits of a young Peggy Guggenheim, draped in a glittering Poiret gown. But Man Ray’s favourite from the series was a Denise Poiret posing next to a Brancusi sculpture, which emanated light and combined art and fashion.”
Kiki de Montparnasse holding an African mask, 1926
Photo credit: Dazed
Secondly Man Ray viewed fashion photography as an important way to spread his artistic ideas, Happily the fashion world was delighted by his surreal approach, and went on to champion some of his most experimental work. Take his famous Rayograph Technique which he discovered accidentally switching on the light in his Paris darkroom, exposing the photo paper mid-development and creating the dramatic contrast of light and dark. Vanity Fair caught wind of this soon after Man Ray had created it, and in 1922 printed 4 of his rayographs in a feature. Such mass-market dissemination would have thrilled the artist; before the age of tv and radio, such publications were swiftly becoming one of the most popular forms of entertainment.
Photo credit: Dazed
Secondly Man Ray viewed fashion photography as an important way to spread his artistic ideas, Happily the fashion world was delighted by his surreal approach, and went on to champion some of his most experimental work. Take his famous Rayograph Technique which he discovered accidentally switching on the light in his Paris darkroom, exposing the photo paper mid-development and creating the dramatic contrast of light and dark. Vanity Fair caught wind of this soon after Man Ray had created it, and in 1922 printed 4 of his rayographs in a feature. Such mass-market dissemination would have thrilled the artist; before the age of tv and radio, such publications were swiftly becoming one of the most popular forms of entertainment.
Man Ray allowed for a wide overlap between his personal and commercial work, with many of the same motifs and stylistic flairs appearing in both. See his 1929 photograph of Lee Miller’s lips, which formed the basis of his 1936 painting Observatory Time: The Lovers, which he included as the backdrop to a fashion editorial for Harper’s Bazaar in Nov 1936. Other elements that showed up in both his private and commissioned imagery included a fascination with hands, a fondness for focusing on one part of the face or body. His pioneering techniques eg his frequent use of double exposures, created interesting visual effects.
His long career was defined by a pioneering quest for experimentation and self-reinvention. He was a painter, sculptor, print maker, photographer, filmmaker and poet, although he always described himself as a painter above all else. And his oeuvre spanned Cubism, Futurism, Dada and Surrealism.
When WW2 hit Paris in 1940, Man Ray left for Hollywood, where he decided to abandon fashion photography for fear that his commercial reputation was eclipsing his artistic one. But he was proud of his fashion output, scouring America for back issues of the magazines he worked for, he understood that he’d succeeded in producing work that went beyond the transitory quality that was typical of magazine work at the time. This was clear in the 1990 photography exhibition in NY, Man Ray/Bazaar Years: A Fashion Retrospective . He had raised the status of fashion photography to that of a real art form, paving the way for younger photographers.
Man Ray - Dress by Elsa Schiaparelli (solarised), 1930
Man Ray, Glass Tear, 1932
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Man Ray is now so valued for his avant-garde approach that modern viewers forget that for 20 years of his career, 1920-40, he made his living largely from commercial fashion photography in Vanity Fair, French Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar, and with Paris’ most famous designers. Now see Man Ray and Fashion at the Musée du Luxembourg Paris from Sept 2020-Jan 2021. His enduring influence, nearly 100 years later, remains as a powerful testament to the uniqueness of his vision.
My main reference was Daisy Woodward at Dazed.