16.10.2025 – 22.02.2026
Curated by Imma Prieto, director of the Museu Tàpies, and Imma Merino, film critic and university lecturer, this exhibition dedicated to Germaine Dulac proposes a reflection on how the avantgardes reduced the profile of certain artists who challenged hegemonic and heteropatriarcal discourses, as imposed by society between the wars. This exercise involves reviving the memory of a period when many of these women were relegated to obscurity by art history, despite the fact that their practices were fundamental for the development of 20th-century artistic movements.
With the aim of exploring archives and accentuating the notion of the importance of cyclical time—something that is very characteristic of Tàpies’ career as well—we look to the past to return to the future, conducting historical research and discovering silenced voices, while at the same time seeking connections with the arrangement of imagery, from a surrealistic perspective shared with the exhibition on Antoni Tàpies.
In 1927, Germain Dulac directed the medium-length film La Coquille et le clergyman [The Seashell and the Clergyman], which was not shown until a year later, in 1928. It is considered the first surrealist film, preceding the famous Un chien andalou by Luis Buñuel, from 1929.
With the sets and production design created by the poet Antonin Artaud, the film depicted the obsession of a clergyman for a woman married to a general. Germaine Dulac (Amiens, 1882 – Paris, 1942) was a film producer, director and screenwriter, and is considered the pioneer of surrealist cinema in the early 20th century. Dulac made more than 30 films from 1917 to 1935, and wrote important theoretical texts, publishing in the leading film journals of the period—Le Film, Mon ciné and Cinémagazine—where she explained her ideas on the importance of authorship, or on cinema as an artistic realm, enabling exploration of human’s inner worlds through imagery. Her most important theoretical collaborations were with the radical feminist journal La Fronde.
Dates
16.10.2025 – 22.02.2026