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'''Pierre Molinier''' (Agen, France 1900 - [[Bordeaux]], [[France]] 1976) was a [[French]] Surrealist painter and [[photographer]], born in Agen(France) on an emblematic date: 13 April 1900, a good Friday.  He was the son of a house painter and decorator specializing in marbiel and wood imitation; his mother a dressmaker, and his aunt an ironer.
'''Pierre Molinier''' (Agen, France 1900 - [[Bordeaux]], [[France]] 1976) was a [[French]] Surrealist painter and [[photographer]], born in Agen(France) on an emblematic date: 13 April 1900, a good Friday.   


==Biography==
==Biography==
[[Image: Molinier.jpg|right|thumb|Pierre Molinier, rue des Faussets, Circa 1974-1975 (Photo © Pierre Petit)]]  
[[Image: Molinier.jpg|right|thumb|Pierre Molinier, rue des Faussets, Circa 1974-1975 (Photo © Pierre Petit)]]  


Molinier's school years were spent with the Brothers of the Agen « Ecoles chrétiennes », despite pretending to be educated by the Jesuits.  At the age of 13, he starts working with his father as an apprentice painter and takes evening courses at the Agen Municipal School of Drawing.  Having been in love with his younger sister for a long time, he takes a photograph of her on her deathbed, in 1918, thus starting his quest for androgyny identity which would be a recurring theme throughout his work. In the following year, he set up his own business, as a house painter in Bordeaux, Place de la Bourse, in the Saint-Pierre Quarter.
He was the son of a house painter and decorator specializing in marble and wood imitation; his mother a dressmaker, and his aunt an ironer. Molinier's school years were spent with the Brothers of the Agen « Ecoles chrétiennes », despite pretending to be educated by the Jesuits.  At the age of 13, he starts working with his father as an apprentice painter and takes evening courses at the Agen Municipal School of Drawing.  Having been in love with his younger sister for a long time, he takes a photograph of her on her deathbed, in 1918, thus starting his quest for androgyny identity which would be a recurring theme throughout his work. In the following year, he set up his own business, as a house painter in Bordeaux, Place de la Bourse, in the Saint-Pierre Quarter.


The first exhibition of his paintings takes place in 1927, after a brief stint in the military from 1920 to 1922.  Every year until 1951, he shows several paintings (figurative or fauve landscapes and portraits) in the Bordeaux « Salons ».  Following the year of his first exhibition, he shows a painting in Paris, at the famous « Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts », and founded the « Société des Artistes Indépendants Bordelais » together with several other painters.  
The first exhibition of his paintings takes place in 1927, after a brief stint in the military from 1920 to 1922.  Every year until 1951, he shows several paintings (figurative or fauve landscapes and portraits) in the Bordeaux « Salons ».  Following the year of his first exhibition, he shows a painting in Paris, at the famous « Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts », and founded the « Société des Artistes Indépendants Bordelais » together with several other painters.  

Revision as of 07:30, 11 July 2007

Pierre Molinier (Agen, France 1900 - Bordeaux, France 1976) was a French Surrealist painter and photographer, born in Agen(France) on an emblematic date: 13 April 1900, a good Friday.

Biography

Pierre Molinier, rue des Faussets, Circa 1974-1975 (Photo © Pierre Petit)

He was the son of a house painter and decorator specializing in marble and wood imitation; his mother a dressmaker, and his aunt an ironer. Molinier's school years were spent with the Brothers of the Agen « Ecoles chrétiennes », despite pretending to be educated by the Jesuits. At the age of 13, he starts working with his father as an apprentice painter and takes evening courses at the Agen Municipal School of Drawing. Having been in love with his younger sister for a long time, he takes a photograph of her on her deathbed, in 1918, thus starting his quest for androgyny identity which would be a recurring theme throughout his work. In the following year, he set up his own business, as a house painter in Bordeaux, Place de la Bourse, in the Saint-Pierre Quarter.

The first exhibition of his paintings takes place in 1927, after a brief stint in the military from 1920 to 1922. Every year until 1951, he shows several paintings (figurative or fauve landscapes and portraits) in the Bordeaux « Salons ». Following the year of his first exhibition, he shows a painting in Paris, at the famous « Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts », and founded the « Société des Artistes Indépendants Bordelais » together with several other painters.

Between 1936 and 1946, Molinier received a presumed visit from the Dalai Lama envoys, who ask him to reproduce symbolic mandalas. This visit remarks his overall change in inspiration to esoterism. This visit was dated by Molinier vaguely around 1936, but considering the evolution of his paintings 1946 would be much more likely.

In 1940, Molinier was recalled into active military service, and was mobilized as a male nurse. During his activity, he was taken prisoner, and then demobilized, taking refuge in the Bordeaux countryside with his famaily. Four years later, his father commits suicide by overdosing on medicine in 1944.

During this time, Molinier gives up figuratism, and he makes his first abstract painting Satin blanc. Shortly after, he explores his erotic period with Les amants à la fleur, in 1948. During this troubled period, Molinier's family life became difficult. Tired of his infidelities and provocative behavior, his wife leaves their marital home in 1949.

In 1950, he builds a farcical « Premature tomb » topped with an engraved black cross : « Here lies/Pierre MOLINIER/born on 13 April 1900 died around 1950/he was a man without morals/he was proud of it and gloried in it/No need to pray for him. » He takes photographs of himself, posing in his studio as crucified and having committed suicide, as well as on his deathbed in his apartement.

The following year was the major turning point in Molinier's artistic career. He broke off from the « Artistes Indépendants Bordelais », following a scandal at the Fall Salon caused by his veiled painting Le grand combat, which represents an entanglement of bodies engaged in a love joust, and in 1952, he gets in touch with the French novelist and art collector André Malraux in order to exhibit his paintings in Paris. He wrote to André Breton, the leading figure of the Surrealism movement, in 1955, and sent him a portfolio containing photographs of his paintings. Breton falls in love with « those magical works » and sends him a series of enthusiastic letters praising his work, "You are today a master in vertigo", he writes in one.

After exhibiting 18 paintings and a few drawings at the Paris gallery run by Breton « A l'Etoile scellée » (27 January - 17 February 1956), he contributes to several issues of the magazine Le surréalisme, même. He meets the writer and poet Joyce Mansour, « the Divine », and starts taking erotic photographs.

A series of interruptions occur in his life and work, when in 1957, he buys a shady bar in Bordeaux called the "Texas-Bar" for his so-called "natural daughter" Monique, who was a notorious prostitute. Three years later, he is involved in a domestic dispute with his wife, slapping her violently and firing a gun above the head of his cousin. For this he spends a month in prison, and gives up his house painting business in order to devote the rest of his life to his art. The following year he is condemned with fines and damages for his assaults; his wife is granted a divorce.

In Summer 1962, Raymond Borde comes to Bordeaux in order to shoot the film Molinier, an homage to the painter's world. Private screenings are held in 1964 of an uncut version, and a public screening of the censored version in 1966. In this time he writes to Emmanuelle Arsan (author of the erotic novel Emmanuelle) and meets her in Paris in December 1964. As a result they engage in passionate correspondence, and Molinier represents her in several of his works. They would not meet again until the Spring of 1967 in Bordeaux.

His plans for publishing an album of photomontages on Le chaman et ses créatures begin to take shape in 1966, and Roland Villeneuve, a specialist of the Devil, was approached to write the preface. Many publishers gave up printing the album, and it would eventually be published in 1995.

Throughout his life, Molinier kept correspondence with many artists and historians; he had numerous meetings with the Surrealist painters Clovis Trouille and Gérard Lattier during 1965, and in a particulary pivotal exchange with the Austrian art historian Peter Gorsen in December, he meets Hanel Koeck, a German sado-masochist and fetishist of legs and shoes. During his childhood, he was constantly surrounded by women, and often wore their shoes and stockings, and so this meeting begins a lengthy and impassioned correspondence with her, with her paying him several visits. She became the model of many of his paintings and photomontages. Within this same period, a yound friend and model, Jean-Pierre Bouyxou, shoots Satan bouche un coin, a film where Molinier appears in this fetishist apparel.

Molinier cannot escape from the difficulties in his life, and in 1970 has a painful gall-bladder removed that had caused him daily suffering. A year prior, he orders the exhumation of his father's corpse and keeps his bones inside a wooden box in the shape of a small coffin, rue des Faussets.

In 1969, An album (Molinier) on his paintings is published by Jean-Jacques Pauvert.

In March 1975, Molinier takes a series of photographs of the young Swiss painter, Luciano Castelli, in transvestite, and another series with Thierry Agullo, a Bordeaux iconoclastic artist, on the theme of Indecency. At the end of the month, Peter Gorsen pays him a visit for the first and unique time) accompanied by Hanel Koeck.

The last of his family troubles occurs in September of this year, when his son Jacque dies in an accident while handling explosives.

At the end of February 1976, he takes a series of photographs of Thierry Agullo, a transvestite, continuing on the theme of Androgyny that played a major part of his life.

Molinier resumes the last of his contacts with his daughter Françoise, and on March 3rd, 1976 Molinier commits suicide by shooting himself in the mouth. His body is transferred to the Bordeaux Morgue, then to the Faculty of Medecine after having bequeathed his body to the establishment in 1970. After being dissected, his remains were buried in a Bordeaux cemetery.

Meaning and influence

Pierre Molinier began his career by painting landscapes in the Impressionist and Fauve styles, with a brief attempt at Abstraction ; he was also known in the Bordeaux art circles as a talented portraitist. After the Second World War, he turned towards esoterism and then fetishistic eroticism, which had been underlying his personal life since adolescence. The feeling that he was fondamentally androgynous will soon be reflected in his erotic paintings (he adored and identified himself with his elder sister, his daughter and a few emblematic women - Emmanuelle Arsan or Hanel Koeck, for instance). Each painting from this period (approximately 70 of them) is the stunning result of a painstaking technical and ideological achievement : the work on the body forms, the transparent superposition of colours ("glacis", especially in the green and reddish tones), the esoteric significance of the subjects always contribute to a unique and rare visual experience.

He developped an interesting correspondence with André Breton, the Pope of Surrealism, and sent him photographs of his paintings. Later, Breton, who wrote enthiusiastic pages about them, integrated him into the Surrealist group and organized a solo exhibition of his works in Paris, in January-February 1956. But the extravagant behaviour of Molinier in sexual matters and his blasphemous tendencies in some of his paintings probably frightened Breton : as a result, Molinier did not participate in the 1965 International Surrealist Exhibition.

Molinier took his first photographs at the age of 18, started his erotic production around 1950 and delivered his major prints between 1960 and 1968, which could be read as an extension of his paintings. In photography, he uses self-made props (dolls, prosthetic limbs, high heels, black-net stockings, masks, dildos) to build a fantasy world. His photographs and photomontages are often portraits of himself as a woman, but they can include body parts of female as well as male partners. By cutting and reassembling body elements, he invents new fantastic creatures and give them movement, although he had a very primitive photographic equipment (bellows camera, wooden frames, no enlarger, home kitchen as a darkroom).

Essentially a leg fetishist, but also considering himself as a shaman, facetious and provocative, anti-bourgeois and anti-religious, Molinier enjoyed transgressing gender identification : his outstanding photographs greatly influenced the European and North American Body Art (Art corporel) in the early 1970s and continue to fascinate artists, critics and collectors today.

Bibliography (selection)

Books

ABEILLE, Jacques. Pierre Molinier, présence de l'exil, Bordeaux : Opales / Pleine page éditeurs, 2005, 123 p., 2 ill.

BRETON, André. « Pierre Molinier », in : Le surréalisme et la peinture, Paris : Gallimard, 1966, 427 p.

GORSEN, Peter. Pierre Molinier, lui-même. Essay über den surrealistischen Hermaphroditen, Munich : Rogner und Bernhard, 1972, 39 p., 41 ill.

MACCHERONI, Henri. Un après-midi chez Pierre Molinier, Bordeaux : Opales / Pleine Page éditeurs, 2005, 48 p., 18 ill.

MOLINIER, Pierre. Molinier, Paris : Jean-Jacques Pauvert Editeur, 1969, 92 p., 89 ill.

MOLINIER, Pierre. Les orphéons magiques, Collection L'Autre Pente, Bordeaux : Thierry Agullo Editeur, 1979, 60 p., 6 ill.

MOLINIER, Pierre. Cent photographies érotiques, Collection Images obliques, Paris : Editions Borderie, 1979, 112 p., 107 ill.

MOLINIER, Pierre. Pierre Molinier, Genève : Bernard Letu Editeur, 1979, 80 p., 35 ill.

MOLINIER, Pierre. Le chaman et ses créatures, Bordeaux : William Blake & Co., 1995, 96 p. [Preface by Pierre Molinier, presentation text by Roland Villeneuve, photomontages, drawings and reproductions of paintings]

MOLINIER, Pierre. Der Schamane und seine Geschöpfe, Munich : Schirmer/Mosel, 1995, 96 p.

MOLINIER, Pierre. Je suis né homme-putain. Ecrits et dessins inédits réunis et présentés par Jean-Luc Mercié, Paris : Biro Editeur et Edition Kamel Mennour, 2005, 170 p.

PETIT, Pierre. Molinier, une vie d'enfer, Paris : Editions Ramsay/Jean-Jacques Pauvert, 1992, 267 p., 86 ill. [Biography with catalogs of works, exhibitions, filmography and bibliography]

PETIT, Pierre. Molinier, une vie d'enfer, Kyoto : Jimbun Shoin, 2000, 300 p., 86 ill. [Translation in Japanese of the French edition ; revised and corrected catalogs of works, exhibitions, filmography and bibliography]

PETIT, Pierre. Pierre Molinier et la tentation de l'Orient, Bordeaux : Opales / Pleine Page éditeurs, 2005, 64 p., 24 ill.

Articles

As of today, approximately 500 articles on Molinier have been recorded : a list of the most interesting ones and some excerpts can be found in the "Bibliographie" page of the MOLINIER-INFOS website (see below "External links").

Exhibition catalogs

Pierre Molinier. Die Fetische der Travestie. Fotografische Arbeiten 1965-1975, Herausgegeben von Gerhard Fisher und Peter Gorsen, Vienna : Daedalus, 1989, 122 p., 40 ill. [Exhibition catalog, Galerie Faber, Wien]

Pierre Molinier, Winnipeg : Plug-in Editions & Santa Monica : Smart Art Press, 1993, 120 p., 60 ill. [Book for a touring exhibition, Canada]

Pierre Molinier, Genève : Bärtschi-Salomon Editions, 1999, 80 p., 99 ill. [Exhibition catalog, Galerie Guy Bärtschi, Genève]

Pierre Molinier, Valencia : IVAM Institut Valencià d'Art Modern, 1999, 267 p., 118 ill.[Exhibition catalog, IVAM Institut Valencià d'Art Modern, Valencià]

Pierre Molinier photographe. Une rétrospective, Paris : Edition Mennour, 2000, 173 p., 160 ill. [Exhibition catalog, Galerie Kamel Mennour, Paris]

Pierre Molinier. Jeux de miroirs, Bordeaux : Musée des Beaux-Arts de Bordeaux/Le Festin, 2005, 176 p., 46 ill. [Exhibition catalog, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Bordeaux]

Audio-visual

« Trois entretiens inédits avec Pierre Molinier, réalisés en 1971 par Jean Bernard », Licences, Revue-Disque semestrielle, Paris, No. 1, 2000, encart, 20 p., 19 ill. [Text and CD audio]

Molinier. Entretien avec Pierre Chaveau 1972 (Texte + Enregistrement sur CD audio), Bordeaux : Editions Opales/Pleine Page, 2003, 64 p., ill. [Text and CD audio]

Hommage à Pierre Molinier, Rouen : Sordide Sentimental, avril 2007 [Articles in French and English, plus a DVD containing the film Satan bouche un coin by Jean-Pierre Bouyxou and Raphaël-Georges Marongiu, 1967-1968, where Molinier appears]

Works

As of today, 393 paintings, 169 drawings, 28 prints, 590 photographs, 184 photomontages, 124 colour slides, 13 masks, 22 sculptures made by Molinier have been recorded.

Paintings (selection)

1918

Portrait de Madame Molinier, mère. Oil

1925

Etude de ciel d'orage. Oil : 18,5 x 24

1926

Etang à Ermenonville. Oil : 25 x 33

1927

La vallée de Bassens. Oil : 54,5 x 73

1928

Château de Madaillan. Oil : 91 x 123

La dame blonde. Oil : 27 x 35

L'homme en bleu. Oil : 73 x 60

Monastère de Sercolou en Gascogne. Oil

1929

La rue Lepic. Oil : 165 x 200

1930

L'homme au gibus. Oil : 72 x 59

La prière. Oil : 74 x 86

Les quais. Oil

La rue. Oil : 33 x 39

1931

Tapoustka. Oil : 61 x 51

1932

La vallée de Casalet. Oil : 74 x 100,5

1933

L'enfant au berceau. Oil : 38 x 48

1934

L'enfant à la chaise. Oil : 69 x 53

1935

Portrait d'enfant. Oil : 41 x 47

1936

L'homme au béret. Oil : 73 x 55

1938

L'homme au shako. Oil : 63 x 52

1940

Satin blanc. Oil : 81 x 65

1946

Amours. Oil : 41,5 x 46,5

Non conformisme. Oil

1947

Femme à la mantille. Oil : 88 x 74

1948

Les amants à la fleur. Oil : 131 x 98

L'homme au béret. Autoportrait. Oil : 73 x 60.

1949

Les amants dans la campagne. Oil : 94 x 128

Le combat des Cro-Magnon. Oil : 94 x 103

La rue. Oil : 66 x 82

1950

Les amoureuses confondues. Oil : 47 x 56

Le duel. Oil : 72 x 100

Gracieuse. Oil : 73 x 58

Holocauste. Oil : 41 x 33

Nu aux fleurs. Oil : 97 x 130

Portrait de Françoise. Oil : 90 x 67

1951

Le grand combat. Oil : 136 x 203

Je gueule gaiement ce que j'ai à dire. Oil : 80 x 100

1952

Cosmac III. Oil : 64 x 51

La dispute des trois Grâces. Oil : 61 x 51

Le messager. Oil : 51 x 73

Le peloton d'exécution. Oil

Le retour des vendanges. Oil : 81 x 100

Succube. Oil : 94 x 85

1953

Amour. Ah ! Les vaches. Oil : 41 x 33

Le château magique. Oil : 40 x 32,3

1954

Comtesse Midralgar. Oil : 86 x 70

Les dames voilées. Oil : 81 x 100

Sortilège. Oil : 35 x 25

1955

La fleur du paradis. Oil : 89 x 116

Ennazus. Oil : 60 x 51

Noitmosa. Oil : 27 x 22.

Le puits délectable. Oil : 35 x 24

Les seins étoilés No. 1. Oil : 41 x 33

Les seins étoilés No. 2. Oil : 27 x 22

1957

Le Christ puni. Oil : 73 x 59,5

1958

La boîte à fleurs. Oil : 46 x 61

1959

Le temps de la mort No.1. Oil : 81 x 100

1960

Les curieuses. Oil : 73 x 60

Madame d'O. Oil : 35 x 27

Le pas de quatre. Oil : 50 x 61

Le réveil de l'ange. Oil : 100 x 81

Susinella. Oil : 61 x 46

Le temps des assassins. Oil : 51 x 61

1961

Les dames au pistolet. Oil : 81 x 100

1962

Les amoureuses angoissées. Oil : 100 x 81

L'angoisse révoltée. OIl : 64 x 52,5

Cavalier de la Garde du Roy - 2. Oil : 24 x 33

Ce qui est solennel. Oil : 100 x 81

Corbillard No.3. Oil : 38 x 46

Corbillard No.6. Oil : 51 x 74

Culminate. Oil : 81 x 100

La flèche amoureuse. Oil : 55 x 75

Holocauste oui, holocauste non. Oil : 54 x 65

Les jumelles amoureuses dans l'oeuf oblong. Oil : 60 x 73

Les jumelles sont toujours amoureuses. Oil : 81 x 65

Petit bec - L'oeuf d'amour. Oil : 73 x 60

Sacrilège. Oil : 55 x 46

Le temps de la mort No.2. Oil : 92 x 73

1964

Le miroir. Oil : 54 x 73

1965

Les femmes actuelles sont.... Oil : 65 x 54

Oh!... Marie, mère de Dieu. Huile: 100 x 80

Les yeux du temps perdu. Oil : 50 x 61

1966

Les amoureuses. Oil : 54 x 65

Amours. Huile

Le grand combat No.2. Oil : 64 x 80

1968

Skin-D'Amourdo. Oil : 81 x 100

1969

Exémaly. Oil : 73 x 54

Pour Hanel. Oil : 52,5 x 63

1971

Le Baphomet. Oil : 60 x 55

Bonheur fou. Oil : 73 x 60

La communion d'amour. Oil : 54 x 45.

1973

L'empalée. Oil : 63 x 52,5

Jeune fille voilée. Oil : 40 x 32

1974

Les amoureuses No.2. Oil : 65 x 81

1976

Angélica. Oil : 80 x 60 [1947 ; Important modifications in 1975-1976]

Photographs (selection)

Le chaman et ses créatures

This album made by Molinier himself contains 74 photographs which are good illustrations of his 1965-1968 production : it was published only in 1995.

Plate No. 01 : Le chaman (Photomontage)

Plate No. 02 : Introit (Photomontage)

Plate No. 03 : Effigie 1 (Photomontage)

Plate No. 04 : Poupée 1 (Photomontage)

Plate No. 05 : Baphomet (Photomontage)

Plate No. 06 : Poupée 2 (Colour slide)

Plate No. 07 : Rêve (Photomontage)

Plate No. 08 : Vision (Photomontage)

Plate No. 09 : Offertoire (Photomontage)

Plate No. 10 : Les Hanels 1 (Photomontage)

Plate No. 11 : Vision orientale (Photomontage)

Plate No. 12 : Les Mimies (Photomontage)

Plate No. 13 : Les pieds amoureux (Photomontage)

Plate No. 14 : Les bottes (Photomontage)

Plate No. 15 : L'éperon d'amour (Photomontage)

Plate No. 16 : L'odalisque turbulente (Photomontage)

Plate No. 17 : Androgynie (Photomontage)

Plate No. 18 : Gog et Magog (Photomontage)

Plate No. 19 : Pantomime céleste (Photomontage)

Plate No. 20 : Autel de la patrie (Photomontage)

Plate No. 21 : Je suis content (Photomontage)

Plate No. 22 : Curieuse (Photomontage)

Plate No. 23 : La rose noire (Photomontage)

Plate No. 24 : Elévation (Photomontage)

Plate No. 25 : Je rampe vers Gehamman (Photomontage)

Plate No. 26 : Sur le pavois (Photomontage)

Plate No. 27 : Le double (Photomontage)

Plate No. 28 : Les jeux (Photomontage)

Plate No. 29 : Toi, moi (Photomontage)

Plate No. 30 : Hanel 1 (Photomontage)

Plate No. 31 : Le radar amoureux (Photomontage)

Plate No. 32 : Féminin pluriel et triste (Photomontage)

Plate No. 33 : Les Hanels 1 (Photomontage)

Plate No. 34 : Les Hanels 2 (Photomontage)

Plate No. 35 : Ossipago se cache (Photomontage)

Plate No. 36 : Lenah (Photomontage)

Plate No. 37 : Le stylite (Photomontage)

Plate No. 38 : L'enfant-heaume (Photomontage)

Plate No. 39 : Le podex d'amour (Photomontage)

Plate No. 40 : Le festin de Manès (Photomontage)

Plate No. 41 : Méditation vampirique (Photomontage)

Plate No. 42 : Fleur d'enfer (Photomontage)

Plate No. 43 : L'étoile de six (Photomontage)

Plate No. 44 : La victoire (Photomontage)

Plate No. 45 : Cinamone (Photomontage)

Plate No. 46 : On débauche (Photomontage)

Plate No. 47 : Silphium (Photomontage)

Plate No. 48 : Les mandrake se régalent (Photomontage)

Plate No. 49 : Emmanuelle 1 (Photomontage)

Plate No. 50 : A vos outils (Photomontage)

Plate No. 51 : Hanel 2 (Photomontage)

Plate No. 52 : Botanique (Photomontage)

Plate No. 53 : Cravache (Photomontage)

Plate No. 54 : La grande mêlée (Photomontage)

Plate No. 55 : Dessin pour "Le messager" (Photograph)

Plate No. 56 : Le messager (1950) (Photomontage)

Plate No. 57 : Dessin pour "Les yeux du temps perdu" (Photograph)

Plate No. 58 : Les yeux du temps perdu (Colour slide)

Plate No. 59 : Dessin pour "Les jumelles sont toujours amoureuses" (Photograph)

Plate No. 60 : Les jumelles sont toujours amoureuses (Colour slide)

Plate No. 61 : Dessin pour "Pour Hanel" (Photograph)

Plate No. 62 : Pour Hanel (1968-1969) (Colour slide)

Plate No. 63 : Dessin pour "Exémaly" (Photograph)

Plate No. 64 : Exémaly (Colour slide)

Plate No. 65 : Emmanuelle 2 (Photograph)

Plate No. 66 : L'oeuvre, le peintre et son fétiche (Photograph)

Plate No. 67 : Dessin pour "La communion d'amour" (Photograph)

Plate No. 68 : La communion d'amour (Colour slide)

Plate No. 69 : Dessin pour "Bonheur fou" (Photograph)

Plate No. 70 : Bonheur fou (Colour slide)

Plate No. 71 : Dessin pour "Amours" (Photograph)

Plate No. 72 : Amours (Colour slide)

Plate No. 73 : Dessin pour "Le Baphomet" (Photograph)

Plate No. 74 : Le Baphomet (Colour slide)

Personal exhibitions (selection)

As of today, 224 Molinier exhibitions have been recorded : 58 personal and 166 collective. Below are listed the main personal exhibitions (except for the major Bordeaux collective one in 2005).

1931

Exposition Pierre Molinier, Galerie A. Grézy, Bordeaux, France, 12-18 January 1931

1948

Exposition Pierre Molinier, Galerie d'Art Georges-Faure, Bordeaux, France, March 1948

1956

« Molinier », Galerie A l'Etoile Scellée, Paris, France, 27 January -17 February 1956

1977

« Hommage à Pierre Molinier », Fondation Soulac Médoc, Soulac, France, 14 July - August 1977

1979

« Molinier. Peintures, photos et photomontages », Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, France, 19 September - 05 November 1979

« Molinier. Peintures, photos et photomontages », Exposition co-produite entre le Centre Georges-Pompidou, Musée National d'Art Moderne et la Fondation Aquitaine, A la Renaissance du Vieux Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France, 16 November - 14 December 1979

« Pierre Molinier. Peintures, dessins, gravures & photomontages », Galerie du temps cassé, Bordeaux, France, 20 November - 15 December 1979

1980

« Molinier 1900-1976. Mälningar, fotografier och fotomontage », Malmö Konsthall, Malmö, Sweden, 19 January - 09 March 1980

1982

« Thérèse Agullo par Pierre Molinier », Galerie J. & J. Donguy, Paris, France, 09 November - 04 December 1982

1986

« Pierre Molinier », Art Space Mirage, Tokyo, Japon, 01-30 April 1986 and 12-25 May 1986

« Molinier, le même et l'autre. Exposition rétrospective de peintures, dessins, sculptures », Château de Mongenan, Portets, France, 29 August - 01 November 1986

« Pierre Molinier : photographies / Luciano Castelli: dessins, hommage à Molinier », Galerie Joachim Becker, Cannes, France

1988

« Succession Pierre Molinier », Galerie Urbi et Orbi, Espace J. et J. Donguy, Paris, France, November 1988

1989

« Pierre Molinier - Die Fetische der Travestie. Fotografische Arbeiten 1965-1975 », Galerie Faber, Vienna, Austria, 25 January - 10 March 1989

1990

Brent Sikkema Fine Arts, New York, U.S.A.

1991

Galerie Hummel, Vienna, Austria

1992

« Pierre Molinier. Le regard obscène », Galerie Bouqueret-Lebon, Paris, France, 29 April - 16 May 1992

1993

« Pierre Molinier », Floating Gallery Centre for Photography, Winnipeg, Canada, 22 January - 13 February 1993 [Touring exhibition]

« Pierre Molinier », Fine Arts Gallery, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada, 22 April - 28 May 1993 [Touring exhibition]

« Pierre Molinier », Centre International d'Art Contemporain, Montréal, Canada, 01 August - 01 November 1993 [Touring exhibition]

« Pierre Molinier. Collection d'un amateur », Galerie Bouqueret-Lebon, Paris, France, 10 September - 20 October 1993

« Pierre Molinier », Cabinet Gallery, London, Great Britain

1994

« Pierre Molinier », Toronto Photographers Workshop, Toronto, Canada, 02 April - 07 May 1994 [Touring exhibition]

« Der Schamane und seine Kreaturen. Pierre Molinier-Fotografien und Montagen », Galerie der Neuen Gesellschaft für Bildende Kunst (NGBK), Berlin, Germany, 21 May - 03 July 1994

« Pierre Molinier », Australian Center for Photography, Sydney, Australia

1996

« Pierre Molinier », Wooster Gardens / Brent Sikkema and Ubu Gallery, New York, U.S.A., 07 September - 05 October 1996

1998

« Pierre Molinier (Scènes de la séduction) », Palais de l'Archevêché, Arles, France, August 1998

« Pierre Molinier », Santa Monica Museum of Art, Santa Monica, U.S.A., 25 July - 20 September 1998

1999

« Pierre Molinier », Institut Valencià d'Art Modern (IVAM), Centre Julio González, Valencia, Spain, 15 April - 21 June 1999

« Pierre Molinier », Galerie Guy Bärtschi, Geneva, Switzerland, 25 November 1999 - 29 January 2000

2000

« Pierre Molinier. Original gelatin silver prints from 1950s to 70s », Tony Shafrazi Gallery, New York, U.S.A, 13 April - 09 May 2000

« Pierre Molinier, photographe. Une rétrospective », Galerie Kamel Mennour, Paris, France, 13 April - 13 June 2000

2001

« Pierre Molinier: 1946-1966, 2 décennies "magiques" », Lattuada Pardo Gallery, Milan, Italy, 23 May - 18 September 2001 ; A l'enseigne des Oudin, Paris, France, 03 July - 29 September 2001

2003

« Pierre Molinier (1900-1976). Fetish performance. Photographs and photomontages (1965-1971)», Galerie Berinson, Berlin, Germany, 13 April - 11 June 2003

2004

« Pierre Molinier (1900-1976). Ecce Homo (Original collages and photomontages) », Patricia Laligant Gallery, New York, U.S.A., 21 May - 26 June 2004

2005

« Je suis né homme-putain », Galerie Kamel Mennour, Paris, France, 02 September - 02 October 2005

« Pierre Molinier / Jeux de miroirs », Musée des Beaux-Arts de Bordeaux, Galerie des Beaux-Arts, Bordeaux, France, 23 September - 20 November 2005 [Major collective exhibition]

External links

http://molinier-infos.ifrance.com/