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Chaim Soutine and Max Ernst: the dialectics of expressionism and surrealism

Introduction: parallel worlds in Paris

Chaim Soutine (1893–1943) and Max Ernst (1891–1976) were two giants of European art in the 20th century, whose creative trajectories crossed in Paris, but originated from diametrically opposite artistic and philosophical systems. Soutine was a genius of the Paris School of Expressionism, immersed in the tragic materialism of flesh and nature. Ernst was one of the founders of Dadaism and surrealism, a researcher of the unconscious, myth, and automatic techniques. Their acquaintance and brief period of interaction in the 1920s represent a unique case of dialogue between the "truth of nature" and the "truth of dreams".

Context of acquaintance: "The Hive" and the artistic brotherhood

Soutine and Ernst met in Paris in the early 1920s. Soutine, who had been living in poverty for several years, lived in the famous artists' dormitory "The Hive" (La Ruche), where his neighbors were Chaim, Chagall, Modigliani, Léger. Ernst, demobilized after the war, arrived in Paris in 1922 and quickly joined the circle of Dadaists and future surrealists around André Breton. Their proximity was likely mediated by the common environment of Montparnasse and the figure of critic and collector Paul Westheim. Despite the difference in approaches, they were united by their common status as immigrants (Soutine from the Russian Empire, Ernst from Germany) and the status of radical innovators who did not fit into the academic mainstream.

Artistic antipodes: flesh vs. fantasy

Soutine's creative method:

Cult of nature: Soutine worked exclusively with nature. His famous animal tusks were bought at abattoirs and decomposed in the studio until he found the right "color of death". His portraits and landscapes are the result of a tense, almost ecstatic dialogue with the real object.

Expression through matter: His goal is to reveal the inner, hidden essence of the subject through radical distortion of form, thick, pasty texture, and explosive, "screaming" palette. His painting is physiological and sensory.

Tragic humanism: The subjects of Soutine (cattle carcasses, servant portraits, distorted landscapes) are addressed to eternal themes of suffering, death, and the vulnerability of flesh.

Ernst's creative method:

Liberation from nature: Ernst consciously sought to move away from the traditional representation of the visible world. He invented techniques of frottage (rubbing with a pencil to reveal hidden textures) and grattage (scraping), allowing "automatically" to extract images from the unconscious.

Collage and alchemy of images: His famous collage novels ("Hundred Heads Without Bodies", "The Woman with 100 Heads") created new, surreal narratives from fragments of old engravings. He constructed fantastic worlds inhabited by hybrid creatures and symbols.

Irony and mythology: Unlike Soutine's pathos, Ernst's art is imbued with irony, play, and intellectual reflection. He mythologized modernity, creating an archaeology of the imaginary.

Personal and creative intersections: the portrait of Herda Groth

The most concrete and significant evidence of their connection is the series of portraits of Max Ernst's wife, Herda Groth (Herda Ernst), painted by Soutine. This is a unique case where the model of a surrealist (the wife of one of the main "destroyers" of figuration) posed for one of the last "obsessed" figurative artists.

Aesthetic dialogue: In the portraits of Herda (around 1925–1926), Soutine slightly restrains his wild palette and deformation. The image becomes more focused and melancholic, which could be a reaction to the personality of the model. Ernst, in turn, highly valued the power of Soutine's painting, seeing in it an expression of uncontrolled, almost "bestial" creative force, akin to the surrealist cult of madness and obsession.

Mutual respect: Despite the difference in methods, they recognized the radicalism of each other. Soutine, according to some reminiscences, admired the freedom of Ernst's imagination. Ernst, in turn, saw in Soutine an example of an artist whose creativity is born from the depths of psychophysiological organization, bypassing reason, which was close to the surrealist idea of "automatic writing".

Contrast of fates during the war period

The Second World War cruelly divided their paths, emphasizing the difference in their positions:

Soutine, a Jew by origin, was forced to hide from the Nazis in France. His health, undermined by years of poverty and stomach ulcers, worsened. He died in 1943 after a risky operation, being secretly transported to Paris. His death became a tragic epilogue to a life full of suffering.

Ernst, as a "degenerate artist", was also persecuted by the Nazis, but he managed to emigrate to the United States in 1941 with the help of Peggy Guggenheim. In America, he continued an active creative and exhibition activity, influencing the formation of abstract expressionism. He survived the war and died in honor as a recognized classic.

Legacy and influence: two poles of modernism

Their art influenced post-war trends in different ways:

Soutine became a precursor for artists of the "New Figuration" and lyrical abstraction (for example, for Willem de Kooning, who noted the power of his texture and gesture). His obsession with matter anticipated an interest in the body in art in the second half of the 20th century.

Ernst directly influenced the development of abstract expressionism (through the technique of automatism), pop art (through irony and the use of mass media images in collages), and all subsequent conceptual art.

Conclusion: the dialogue of non-communicating vessels

The history of the relationship between Chaim Soutine and Max Ernst is the story of the meeting of two fundamental, but opposite tendencies of modernism: expressive, material-fleshy, and intellectually surreal. They were like two non-communicating vessels filled with different substances: one with blood, flesh, and the nervous tremor of nature, the other with dream images, mythological archetypes, and the play of reason.
Their brief dialogue in Paris in the 1920s demonstrates that true avant-garde was not monolithic, but represented a field of tension between extreme poles. Soutine and Ernst, each in their own way, expanded the boundaries of art: one — into the depths of the material world, bringing it to a boil, the other — into the infinity of the human psyche's inner cosmos. Their parallel existence enriched the palette of the 20th century, proving that the path to true modernity can lie both through the hypertrophy of reality and through its complete negation.


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Chaim Soutine and Max Ernst // Islamabad: Pakistan (ELIB.PK). Updated: 17.12.2025. URL: https://elib.pk/m/articles/view/Chaim-Soutine-and-Max-Ernst (date of access: 22.01.2026).

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