At Large  June 24, 2026  Annah Otis

Villa Pilar: The Rediscovery of a Lenora Carrington Painting

WikiCommons. Photography: Tania Victoria/Mexico City Ministry of Culture. Leonora Carrington House and Studio.

Home and studio of the artist Leonora Carrington for six decades. Managed by the Metropolitan Autonomous University. License.

Villa Pilar, which was painted in 1940 by Leonora Carrington during her confinement at the Sanatorio Morales—a clinic located just outside Santander, Spain—remained in her psychiatrist’s family for more than 80 years after it was given to him as a gift. The surrealist painting of hybrid human-animal figures set against a lush green background will go on public view for the first time this July at the Freud Museum in London. Its emergence is a pointed reminder of how many female artists stand in the shadow of their supposed mental illness and their more famous partners, despite impressive contributions to their mediums.

Carrington was born in 1917 to an upper-class Catholic family living in England who afforded her the opportunity to pursue art at the Chelsea School of Art, and later abroad. Much to society’s horror, she began a relationship with Max Ernst, a fellow surrealist 26 years her senior. They moved to the south of France before Ernst was arrested by the Nazis and Carrington fled to Spain at the start of World War II. Despite being considered Ernst’s muse, she continued to develop her own style, inspired by the likes of Salvador Dalí and André Breton.

WikiCommons

Leonora Carrington, The Magical World of the Mayans, National Anthropology Museum. License.

It was in Spain that Carrington experienced mental health struggles and entered the sanatorium, where she painted just two pieces: Villa Pilar and Down Below. Both allude to the horrors of mid-20th century mental hospitals, and both will also be on display at the Freud Museum’s exhibit, Leonora Carrington: The Symptomatic Surreal, which runs through August 10th. Carrington’s work is put in conversation with Sigmund Freud’s collection of antiquities, making it hard not to wonder if her talent is being further pathologized instead of celebrated in its own right.

Creative ambition in women has too often been read as proof of imbalance rather than evidence of genius. Camille Claudel, who modeled the hands and feet for Auguste Rodin’s The Burghers of Calais while developing her own sculptural voice, had her work censored for what critics deemed inappropriate sensuality. She was committed to an asylum in 1913 and remained there until her death 30 years later. Claudel is still remembered more as Rodin’s muse and lover than as a gifted artist.

WikiCommons

Leonora Carrington, How Doth the Little Crocodile, c. 2000. License.

After leaving the sanatorium in Spain, Carrington made her way to Mexico by way of New York and eventually became a central figure in the Mexican feminist movement. Her resilience is evident in the paintingssketches, plays, and novels she produced there. It is likewise evident in the flurry of attention her story has recently received. In addition to the Freud Museum exhibit, the Musée du Luxembourg is holding the first major show in France devoted exclusively to Carrington’s work. A movie produced in 2025 about her love affair with Ernst is being re-released in theaters after a run at film festivals.

The rediscovery of Villa Pilar is a timely reminder of the barriers female artists faced and continue to face in establishing a reputation on their own terms without being overshadowed by their struggles or romantic interests. Now, contemporary creators and institutions have a responsibility to help them do so. 

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Leonora Carrington: The Symptomatic Surreal
Start Date:
March 25, 2026
End Date:
August 10, 2026
Venue:
Freud Museum London
City:
About the Author

Annah Otis

Annah Otis is a New York City-based contributor to Art & Object with a master’s degree in art history. She is also a marketing communications executive.

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