Who Was Claude Cahun? Google Doodle Celebrates the French Surrealist Photographer
Today's Google Doodle celebrates Claude Cahun, the French surrealist photographer and writers whose works challenged norms around gender and sexuality in the early 20th century.
Born on this day in 1894 to a Jewish family in Nantes, western France, Cahun was the child of newspaper owner Maurice Schwob and Victorine Marie Courbebaisse. The artist (who was born Lucy Schwob) grew up surrounded by creative people: Maurice's brother was avant-garde writer Marcel Schwob and his uncle was traveler and writer David Léon Cahun.
According to Google, the artist decided to identify as non-binary, despite gender non-conformity being considered taboo in France at the time.
Around 1915, Cahun cut their hair very short and began taking self-portraits against a neutral background, dressed either as a sailor, a sportsman, a dandy or in a men's suit. In 1917, the artist changed their name, according to the Paris-based Archives of Women Artists, Research and Exhibitions (AWARE).
Cahun's cross-dressing self-portraits have since become subjects of interest for gender studies and post-modernist theory, according to the archive.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City describes Cahun as "a creative chameleon" who was "keenly attuned to the quintessentially modern condition of self-alienation."
Cahun met their lifelong partner and collaborator Marcel Moore (who was previously known as Suzanne Malherbe) in 1909. The pair became "stepsisters" nearly a decade later, when Cahun's father married Moore's widowed mother, according to the U.K.'s National Portrait Gallery.
The couple moved to Paris in 1914, where they began their artistic collaborations.
Cahun's works examined gender fluidity through literature and self-portraits. Their 1927 photo series "I am in training, don't kiss me" portrayed the artist as a feminized weightlifter, challenging masculine and feminine stereotypes.
A birthday #GoogleDoodle for a revolutionary artist far ahead of their time: French author & surrealist self-portrait photographer Claude Cahun 🇫🇷
— Google Doodles (@GoogleDoodles) October 25, 2021
Cahun challenged the gender norms of the early 20th-century through art & literature 🖼
Learn more → https://t.co/zB4GNUHr5j pic.twitter.com/SGGYhy8Ghw
Cahun is best known today for these self-portraits, but the artist saw themselves primarily as a writer, according to the National Portrait Gallery. In 1930, Cahun published Aveux non avenus (translated into English as Disavowals), which was an "anti-memoir" including 10 photomontages created with Moore.
In 1937, Cahun and Moore settled in Jersey, one of the Channel Islands between Britain and France. They later became actively involved in the resistance movement against the island's Nazi occupation, the gallery says.
The couple produced anti-Nazi propaganda and were arrested in July 1944. They were sentenced to death and imprisoned for nearly a year before Jersey was liberated in May 1945.
Cahun was awarded the Medal of French Gratitude in 1951 for their resistance work during the Second World War. The artist died in 1954 while Moore died 18 years later in 1972.
Cahun's self-portraits were forgotten following the Second World War but their works were rediscovered and widely circulated in the 1990s, AWARE says.
