Art by Diego Rivera for the Mexican supplement in Minotaure no. 13.
I was tempted to title this one Minotaure! since I’ve been searching for copies of the magazine in question for many years. I’m certain I went looking in all the usual sources last year in the run-up to the Surrealist centenary, without success. Anyway, here they all are at last, a complete run of one of the major Surrealist periodicals.
Minotaure was notable for a number of reasons, first among them the publisher, Albert Skira, whose resources enabled the production of a very desirable item, with good design, colour prints in each issue, and plenty of photos and other artwork throughout. The Surrealist publications of the 1920s had been historically important but all of them were monochrome documents with few pictures and few pages. Minotaure had the production values of a quality magazine and an impressive roster of artists and writers to fill each issue. Skira and editor E. Tériade originally intended their periodical to cover a wide range of art, past and present, but with most of the early contributors being members of André Breton’s Surrealist circle the magazine quickly became a showcase for Surrealist art and theorising. The first issue featured a cover by Pablo Picasso, with more Picasso artwork inside. Subsequent issues had covers by leading Surrealist artists–Dalí, Ernst, Magritte, Masson–which captured the movement at a time before Breton’s persistent expulsions hollowed out the original group. Breton writes in nearly all the issues but was forbidden from using Minotaure as a political platform (the previous Surrealist journal had been the very political Le Surréalisme au service de la révolution), a restriction he kept to. His manner was often dictatorial but he always had an eye for the main chance, or the bonne chance in this case.
The written contents of Minotaure are mostly in French but the pictorial matter is worth seeing even if much of it is very familiar today. Among the written highlights are two essays by Salvador Dalí, the first on the “edible” nature of Art Nouveau architecture, with an emphasis on the work of Gaudí; the second about Pre-Raphaelite painting. It’s understandable that Dalí would be attracted by the meticulous realism of early Millais and William Holman Hunt but I didn’t know his essay included an analysis of Hunt’s The Hireling Shepherd, a painting I look at every time I’m in the Manchester Art Gallery. Elsewhere there are articles about automatism, mediumship, the decalcomania technique in painting, the esoteric symbolism of the alchemists, naive or untutored art, and plenty of single-page items and visual novelties. Photography by Man Ray and Brassaï is a recurrent feature. Skira’s magazine established a template which the two American Surrealist periodicals of the 1940s, View and VVV, did their best to follow. Now that Minotaure is freely available I’ll be waiting impatiently for complete runs of its followers to turn up somewhere.
(Note: some of the copies linked below have had their colour prints removed.)
Minotaure no. 1 (1933)
Cover art by Pablo Picasso.
Minotaure no. 2 (1933)
Cover art by Gaston-Louis Roux.
Minotaure nos. 3–4 (1933)
Cover art by André Derain.
Minotaure no. 5 (1934)
Cover art by F. Bores.
Minotaure no. 6 (1935)
Cover art by Marcel Duchamp.
Minotaure no. 7 (1935)
Cover art by Joan Miró.
Minotaure no. 8 (1936)
Cover art by Salvador Dalí.
Minotaure no. 9 (1936)
Cover art by Henri Matisse.
Minotaure no. 10 (1937)
Cover art by René Magritte.
Minotaure no. 11 (1938)
Cover art by Max Ernst.
Minotaure nos. 12–13 (1939)
Cover art by André Masson.
Elsewhere on { feuilleton }
• The Surrealism archive
Previously on { feuilleton }
• Viewing View
• View: The Modern Magazine
John, the impulse you share with others like Mark Valentine and Douglas Anderson to search out the byways of human expression and bring back what you find enriches us all and does not go unappreciated.
Thanks, Stephen. The impulse for me has always been my wanting to find something new, or–as in this case–something I’ve known about for years which I then think other people may want to hear about. We’re very fortunate to have so many things like this freely available, but not everyone has the time or inclination to find them or knows where to look. Minotaure was at least reprinted in a book edition in the early 1980s but you’d have to spend a lot of money to buy those reprints today.
John,
This is a terrific find. Thank you. I’d, similarly, been looking for ages and only found two issues on Internet Archive, to date.
The Gallica site is throwing up “internal error” messages when I try the links. I’ll try them again tomorrow, but wanted to flag that for you.
Thanks, Jose. I checked the links just now and they’re all working for me but I did get similar errors when I was trying to download the copies originally. I think it’s just the site getting overloaded during the day. Gallica is an important resource but the web interface is very badly programmed, bewilderingly so when it’s part of a national library.