Larmes | |
Other Language 1: | French |
Other Title 1: | Larmes de Verre |
Other Language 2: | English |
Other Title 2: | Glass Tears |
Artist: | Man Ray |
Year: | 1932 |
Medium: | Gelatin silver print |
Larmes, or Tears; aka Larmes de Verre, in English, Glass Tears, is a black and white photograph created between 1930 and 1932 by the American photographer Man Ray. The image was published in the December 1935 issue of the surrealist art magazine Minotaure, though a similar image of a single eye had appeared in a 1934 book of Ray's photographs.[1] A print of Larmes is held in the collection of the J. Paul Getty Museum in California.[2]
The photograph is an extreme close-up of a woman's upturned face with glass droplets placed on her cheeks to imitate tears. Differing interpretations have been given for the meaning of the photograph. Art historian Erin C. Garcia wrote that Ray "emulated the melodrama that compensated for the lack of dialogue in silent films" in Larmes and likened the model's eyes to "insect-like creatures with hundreds of legs", and another critic wondered whether the image was "ridiculing female crocodile tears, or pouring scorn on the men who are taken in by such sentimentalism".[3] [4]
A 1995 sale of Larmes valued the image at between $200,000 and $250,000.[5]