ManRAY
Man Ray: M for Dictionary
11.04.–24.07.2026
Man Ray: M for Dictionary
11.04.–24.07.2026
Press Release
Fondazione Marconi and Gió Marconi are pleased to present Man Ray: M for Dictionary, a comprehensive survey of Man Ray’s work across media, which takes his linguistic thought as its organising principle.
The exhibition, presented on the fiftieth anniversary of the artist’s death, is organised in collaboration with curator and art historian Yuval Etgar and Deborah D’Ippolito.
One of the most celebrated photographers of the modern era, an original creator of objects and multiples, a painter and a draftsperson, Man Ray was a multimedia artist in the true sense of the word. He was fascinated by the transition from manual craftsmanship to mechanical reproduction and called for the merger of formal and conceptual orders. But perhaps more than anything, the medium that underlined his entire artistic output was language.
Born Emmanuel Radnitzky in 1890, Man Ray’s parents were Russian immigrants who settled in Philadelphia initially and later moved to Brooklyn. In 1912 the family shortened its name to Ray with the aim to obscure its Jewish origins. Still a young man, Emmanuel followed suit, shortening his name to Man Ray, a transformational play on words that enabled him to reinvent his identity while keeping it alive. The event, inspirational and traumatic at once, would come to symbolise Man Ray’s original approach to his art and was undoubtedly the artist’s first of many further linguistic wordplays.
A dictionary of sorts, the exhibition Man Ray: M for Dictionary unfolds Man Ray’s fascination with unrealised relationships between words, objects, and images.
Marking the first historical survey exhibition of Man Ray’s work to take language as its organising principle, Man Ray: M for Dictionary returns to Studio Marconi’s first display of the artist in 1969 (Je n’ai jamais peint un tableau récent) and the publication of his celebrated cycle of drawings Alphabet for Adults. A collection of visual puns, each of the alphabet drawings depicts a letter along with an image of a word that begins with that same letter – ‘D’ for ‘delight’, ‘devise’ or ‘do’, and ‘R’ for ‘real’ or ‘regret’. A visual writer, if ever there was one, Man Ray’s drawings, just like his photographs, objects, and paintings, are embodiments of a genuine linguistic experiment – humorous and critical, but also intimate and deeply provoking. “To make a new alphabet of the discarded props of a conversation can lead only to fresh discoveries in language”, he wrote, and “concentration is the desired end, as in an anagram whose density is the measure of its destiny”.
M for Dictionary is organised according to five primary categories, subtitled ‘The Alphabet’, ‘Light Writing’, ‘Body Language’, ‘Objectives’, and ‘Mathematical Objects’. A second display, titled In Other Words, is held at the underground level of the building, presenting works by contemporary artists from the gallery’s roster – Alex Da Corte, Simon Fujiwara, Wade Guyton, Allison Katz and Tai Shani – whose fascination with language as a condition of visual and material creation draws directly on the legacy of Man Ray.
The exhibition, presented on the fiftieth anniversary of the artist’s death, is organised in collaboration with curator and art historian Yuval Etgar and Deborah D’Ippolito.
One of the most celebrated photographers of the modern era, an original creator of objects and multiples, a painter and a draftsperson, Man Ray was a multimedia artist in the true sense of the word. He was fascinated by the transition from manual craftsmanship to mechanical reproduction and called for the merger of formal and conceptual orders. But perhaps more than anything, the medium that underlined his entire artistic output was language.
Born Emmanuel Radnitzky in 1890, Man Ray’s parents were Russian immigrants who settled in Philadelphia initially and later moved to Brooklyn. In 1912 the family shortened its name to Ray with the aim to obscure its Jewish origins. Still a young man, Emmanuel followed suit, shortening his name to Man Ray, a transformational play on words that enabled him to reinvent his identity while keeping it alive. The event, inspirational and traumatic at once, would come to symbolise Man Ray’s original approach to his art and was undoubtedly the artist’s first of many further linguistic wordplays.
A dictionary of sorts, the exhibition Man Ray: M for Dictionary unfolds Man Ray’s fascination with unrealised relationships between words, objects, and images.
Marking the first historical survey exhibition of Man Ray’s work to take language as its organising principle, Man Ray: M for Dictionary returns to Studio Marconi’s first display of the artist in 1969 (Je n’ai jamais peint un tableau récent) and the publication of his celebrated cycle of drawings Alphabet for Adults. A collection of visual puns, each of the alphabet drawings depicts a letter along with an image of a word that begins with that same letter – ‘D’ for ‘delight’, ‘devise’ or ‘do’, and ‘R’ for ‘real’ or ‘regret’. A visual writer, if ever there was one, Man Ray’s drawings, just like his photographs, objects, and paintings, are embodiments of a genuine linguistic experiment – humorous and critical, but also intimate and deeply provoking. “To make a new alphabet of the discarded props of a conversation can lead only to fresh discoveries in language”, he wrote, and “concentration is the desired end, as in an anagram whose density is the measure of its destiny”.
M for Dictionary is organised according to five primary categories, subtitled ‘The Alphabet’, ‘Light Writing’, ‘Body Language’, ‘Objectives’, and ‘Mathematical Objects’. A second display, titled In Other Words, is held at the underground level of the building, presenting works by contemporary artists from the gallery’s roster – Alex Da Corte, Simon Fujiwara, Wade Guyton, Allison Katz and Tai Shani – whose fascination with language as a condition of visual and material creation draws directly on the legacy of Man Ray.