There’s an exhibition of groundbreaking surrealist Lee Miller coming to Heide
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25.09.2023

There’s an exhibition of groundbreaking surrealist Lee Miller coming to Heide

Lee Miller exhibition
Photograph by John Gollings
Words by Staff Writer

Curated by Miller’s son Antony Penrose, the exhibition Surrealist Lee Miller brings 100 photographs from across the artist’s remarkable oeuvre to Australia. 

Heide Museum of Modern Art has announced a major survey exhibition of ground-breaking twentieth century American photographic artist Lee Miller (1907–1977), presented from 4 November 2023 to 25 February 2024.

A Surrealist before the movement had a name, Lee Miller was one of the most original photographic artists of the twentieth century. Defying the expectations placed on her as a woman and an artist, she was as unconventional in her life as in her work.

Surrealist Lee Miller at Heide

  • Surrealist Lee Miller
  • 4 November 2023 to 25 February 2024
  • Heide Museum of Modern Art, 7 Templestowe Road, Bulleen

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The exhibition Surrealist Lee Miller reveals how Miller captured the intensity of her experiences in unforgettable images spanning a remarkably broad oeuvre: from portrait, fashion and surrealist photography in New York and Paris, to landscape and architecture, coverage of the horrors of the Second World War, and the extraordinary world of her creative circle, which included Man Ray, Picasso, Max Ernst, Dora Maar and many others.

Curator and Co-director of Lee Miller Archives Antony Penrose said: “I am delighted to bring this exhibition of the work of my mother, one of the most remarkable female photographers of the twentieth century, to the Heide Museum of Modern Art here in Australia. This is an opportunity to share the originality and breadth of her work, including her images from Paris, New York and Egypt, her Vogue fashion shoots and images of London during the blitz, her documentation of the liberation of France and the horrors of Dachau and Buchenwald concentration camps. In all these areas her surrealist way of seeing is self-evident and aligns with her commitment to the ideals of that movement. Peace, freedom, justice and truth were her fundamental values from her beginning as a Vogue fashion model to her later role as a highly significant WWII frontline war time photographer. Much of her life and her photography was dedicated to making the importance of those values evident to others, as Lee’s commitment to honesty and truth was fundamental to her life and art.”

Heide Museum of Modern Art Head Curator Kendrah Morgan said: “Heide has long been committed to shining a light on the contributions of under-acknowledged women artists, and we feel especially privileged to present the work of Lee Miller, who created some of the most memorable photographic images of the twentieth century. A truly modern woman, Miller was an exact contemporary of Heide founder Sunday Reed, and intriguing parallels exist between the Reeds’ support of avant-garde artists, and Miller and her husband Roland Penrose’s promotion of their creative circle of surrealists.”

While known for her war work and portraits of her famous contemporaries like Picasso (who painted Lee Miller six times), it is Miller’s surrealist images that endure with a fresh directness. Through the 100 photographs on display at Heide, audiences will discover the artist’s strong sense of the surrealist notions of incongruity, dislocation, dark humour and the uncanny, and her ability to perceive and capture surprising juxtapositions or elements of the marvellous in everyday subjects. Miller’s surrealist eye extends to her remarkable work as an official correspondent during the Second World War and creation of images in which the unreality of war assumes a disquieting beauty.

It is only in recent years that the extent of Miller’s photographic legacy has begun to be fully explored, largely due to Antony Penrose’s discovery of a vast archive of his later mother’s work in an attic after her death in 1977. Since then, Miller has been recognised as an important artist and contributor to not only the surrealist movement, but also the development of photography as an art form. In early September the movie LEE was launched at the Toronto International Film Festival, presenting the inspiring life of Lee Miller based on Antony Penrose’s biography The Lives of Lee Miller. Directed by Ellen Kuras and produced by and starring Kate Winslet, the film will be released in Australia during the run of Heide’s exhibition. Penrose’s new book Lee Miller: Photographs, with foreword by Kate Winslet, will also be available to purchase at Heide as part of the exhibition.

Surrealist Lee Miller is a rare chance for Australian audiences to experience the extraordinary oeuvre of the ground-breaking photographic artist through 100 photographs that traverse her life and career.

Head to the Heide website here.