Self-Portrait and Autobiography

Description

Alice Rahon represented herself in this composition with a pallete in hand, standing atop a series of ascending switchbacks lined with abstracted depictions of animals, people, mountains, and trees. The self-portrait—one of just two the artist created—alludes to her itinerant lifestyle and her journey to becoming a painter. Originally a Surrealist poet based in Paris, Rahon left France in 1939 for Mexico City, where she took up painting as well as sculpture. Her fascination with the cultures and landscapes of Mexico led her to develop a style inspired by Paleolithic cave art. This work's shimmering surface is composed of materials sourced from nature, including sand and volcanic ash, further grounding it in the place where it was created.

Provenance

Luis Carral, Mexico City [this and the following according to Gallery Wendi Norris, fact sheet in curatorial file]. Galería Librería Sloane-Racotta, Mexico City. Reyna Henaine, Mexico City, by 2007 [Christie’s New York, June 1, 2007, p. 324]; sold through Christie’s New York, June 1, 2007, lot 273, to Hector Fanghanel (1952–2019), Mexico City; by descent to the Fiord Trust, Mexico City; sold through Gallery Wendi Norris, San Francisco, to the Art Institute of Chicago, September 15, 2020.

Self-Portrait and Autobiography

Alice Rahon

1948

Accession Number

257312

Medium

Oil and sand on canvas

Dimensions

73.6 × 55.9 cm (28 × 22 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Wirt D. Walker Endowment, Major Acquisitions Centennial, Luella Thomas, Samuel A. Marx, Simeon B. Williams Endowment, and Maurice D. Gelleher funds