Capricorn
Max Ernst
Bronze (1948)
"Capricorn is an inventive portrait of Max Ernst and his wife, fellow Surrealist artist Dorothea Tanning. On another level, it expresses the duality of male and female. For the Surrealists, as for the Greeks, the minotaur (half man/half bull) symbolized the battle between rational mind and aggressive instinct. This minotaur figure was probably inspired by a Katsina-a Zuni spirit sculpture-that was owned by Ernst. A mermaid and a dog, with pipe eyes and trowel tongue, rest next to him. The mermaid is also a hybrid. Part woman and part fish, she lives in the sea, a symbol of the feminine unconscious. Tanning named Capricorn after a constellation. The title hints at astrology, the study of the influence of celestial events upon the lives of humans."
I didn’t know about the symbolism of the minotaur, how fascinating. The woman looks incredibly submissive – arms missing and legs tied in a mermaid’s tail. Even her sex is covered (I know, you’d expect that from a mermaid), while the minotaur’s is not.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Good take Gabriela. The dog is what stood out to me as being the child of the pairing meaning genetically I know not what. 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
The minotaur reminds me of the post-modern (?) furniture with form over function. It could have been a chair.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It does look like a very uncomfortable chair. 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person