"Born in England, Leonora Carrington lived in London, Paris, Madrid, Lisbon, New York, Mexico City, and . . . Oak Park?
Leonora abandoned a wealthy family to be a surrealist in Paris. The 1980s found her in suburban Oak Park, Illinois, where she became a friend and co-conspirator with the Chicago Surrealist Group. This book traces memories of their shared adventures.
Penelope Rosemont co-founded the group in 1966 after an extended stay in Paris, where she met André Breton and his group, and was invited to become part of their activities. The Chicago group’s first act protested William S. Rubin’s exhibition, Dada, Surrealism and their Heritage at the Art Institute, which assumed surrealism to be over and did not even consider surrealist women.
Today Leonora Carrington is one of the most famous of painters and writers in surrealism.
Gina Litherland, a member of the Chicago Surrealist Group whose note is included herein, became a close friend of Leonora. "
Dimensions: 5.5" x 8.5"
Materials: Softcover book
Charles H. Kerr Publishing
(South Chicago)
Founded by Charles Hope Kerr, a son of abolitionists, in 1886, Charles H. Kerr Publishing is the oldest continuously running radical publisher in the US, offering "subversive literature for the whole family." Close to the Socialist Party and the Industrial Workers of the World, Kerr brought out many Marxist classics, including the first complete English edition of Capital (1906–1909), as well as works by anarchist Peter Kropotkin, feminist Matilda Joslyn Gage, Irish revolutionist James Connolly, animal rights crusader J. Howard Moore, such noted U.S. socialists as Eugene V. Debs, “Mother” Jones, Upton Sinclair, Jack London, Gustavus Myers, Carl Sandburg, William D. Haywood, Mary E. Marcy—whose Shop Talks on Economics (1911) sold over two million copies—and, more recently, Staughton Lynd, C. L. R. James, and Carlos Cortez.