The Symptomatic Surreal: A Recent Perspective on Carrington’s Artwork
Guests to London’s Freud Museum encounter Leonora Carrington’s work in an intimate, dimly lit area that enhances the surrealist’s advanced themes. The exhibition, titled The Symptomatic Surreal, marks the primary main UK showcase of the British-Mexican artist’s creations in 35 years. In contrast to vibrant shows in Mexico Metropolis establishments that spotlight her eccentric aspect, this present focuses on sketches from her 1940 internment at Peña Castillo sanatorium in Santander, Spain.
The enclosed room, devoid of pure mild, mirrors Carrington’s confinement and the creativity it sparked. Housed in Sigmund Freud’s former house, the exhibition weaves in psychoanalytic insights, illuminating her artwork, life, and views on the unconscious.
Carrington’s Extraordinary Life Journey
Born in 1917 in Chorley, northwest England, to a rich textile household, Carrington rejected debutante expectations to pursue artwork and surrealism. She moved to Paris, forming a relationship with married German surrealist Max Ernst. The couple relocated to Provence, however World Struggle II disrupted their lives. Ernst’s 1940 arrest as an enemy alien and detention in Camp des Milles left Carrington devastated.
Fleeing Nazi advances, she crossed into Spain through Andorra, struggling a psychological breakdown upon reaching Madrid. Interned for six months, she later described the ordeal to pal Marina Warner as “being lifeless,” stating, “I’d suffered a lot when Max was taken away to the camp, I entered a catatonic state, and I used to be now not struggling in an bizarre human dimension.”
Confinement, Remedy, and Creative Response
Curator Vanessa Boni emphasizes this perilous interval, revealing Carrington endured Cardiazol therapies thrice—shocks inducing seizures to implement compliance. Boni hyperlinks the sanatorium to Carrington’s view of it as “like demise,” connecting to later Mexican influences on mortality.
Freud’s assortment options Egyptian deities like Anubis, Isis, Horus, and Osiris, symbolizing demise as transformation. Private letters to her father, excerpts from her 1944 memoir Down Beneath, and sanatorium sketches hint her psychological unraveling and rebirth.
Each Freud and Carrington obsessed over the “down beneath”—the underworld. This foreshadows Mexico’s Mictlán, a transformative afterlife realm the place demise integrates into day by day life. A welcoming quote captures her essence: “I didn’t know the place I used to be going. This appears to be a recurring factor in my life. I believe it’s demise observe.”
Haunting Visions in Down Beneath
The centerpiece, the 1940 portray Down Beneath, depicts eerie, eyeless figures earlier than a circus tent amid darkening skies. Vibrant accents—pink stockings, yellow tights, a white goose-feathered physique, and Carrington’s inexperienced horse alter-ego—distinction the trauma behind it.
The Symptomatic Surreal enriches understanding of Carrington’s oeuvre throughout portray, drawing, sculpture, and writing. It probes the unconscious, mortality, and psychological well being by means of astute curation. The exhibition runs on the Freud Museum till June 28, 2026.

