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September 2024
Maxime Shazzam

The Georges Goldfayn collection at Berthet-Aittouarès

To celebrate the centenary of Surrealism, the Galerie Berthet-Aittouarès is offering an immersion into the collection of Georges Goldfayn (1933-2019), André Breton’s friend and assistant. This exhibition by Michèle and Odile Aittouarès bears witness to the way Georges Goldfayn turned his life into his work, as well as paying tribute to a friend.

Pierre Loeb's former gallery, now the Galerie Berthet-Aittouarès, will be the setting for the collection of a lifetime, bringing together a selection of fifty works of Oceanic art, Art Brut and Surrealist art: Wolfgang Paalen, Simon Hantaï, Konrad Klapheck, Jindrich Styrsky, Jindrich Heisler, Aloys Zötl, Toyen is particularly well represented with paintings, drawings, and an exceptional box-object made by Jindrich Heisler for Toyen...

From left to right: Arsene Bonnafous-Murat — Georges Goldfayn — Toyen — Mimi Parent — Micheline Bounoure — André Breton at the Retz desert — 1960 (detail) © Denise Bellon

Who is Georges Goldfayn? While specialists in Surrealism may know Goldfayn as André Breton's friend and assistant, who for many years ran the Galerie À l'Étoile scellée, while cinephiles remember that he worked with Henri Langlois at the Cinémathèque, helped to found the magazine L'Age du cinéma in 1951 and made a few appearances in experimental films, this exhibition shows that his life cannot be summed up in terms of his public activities, however striking they may be.

What we see in this presentation, what we feel despite the absence of its creator, is Goldfayn's eye: this passion for seeing and making others see, which links all his activities, and is condensed in the sensitive environment that he has managed to create.

 

The world of Georges Goldfayn, this singular way of arranging surrealist works, art Brut and oceanic objects, has nothing to do with a museum: here, everything makes sense because everything is a trace of life, everything is an admission of a friendly bond, everything is a way, skillfully improvised (Goldfayn loved jazz as he loved painting and cinema), of keeping alive the dialogue between othernesses so rightly confronted. The apartment was a self-portrait. The apartment was the place of a real conversation.

Toyen, A l affut de la pensée, 1956, 100 x 81cm, © Bertrand Michau, courtesy Galerie Berthet-Aittouarès

In the context of this exhibition, Michèle and Odile Aittouarès are publishing a book, paying tribute to their friend Georges, who died in 2019. Two perspectives will shed light on the portrait of one of Surrealism's last witnesses and key players: Annie Lebrun's, a Surrealist writer and poet and Georges Goldfayn’s friend, with whom she shared an essential relationship with Toyen, will evoke the imprint left by this man on her memory and her life. The art historian Pierre Wat, who didn’t know him, will take a different look by attempting, using the collection as a set of traces, to paint a portrait of the man who loved, collected and arranged it.

 

The exhibition is part of the Surrealism in Paris programme organised by the Centre Georges Pompidou, the Atelier André Breton and the Comité Professionnel des Galeries d'Art, to mark the centenary of the Surrealist Manifesto. 

Maxime Shazzam, 30/09/2024
Georges Goldfayn - A surrealistic passion - 11/16/2024
Galerie Berthet – Aittouarès - 14 and 29, rue de Seine 75006 Paris

Georges Goldfayn's house, Paris ©Bertrand Michau, courtesy Galerie Berthet-Aittouarès

Konrad klapheck, les lois non écrites, 1962, oil on canvas, 90 x 70 cm, ©Bertrand Michau, courtesy Galerie Berthet-Aittouarès

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