Birthday, Surrealist self-portrait painted in oils in 1942 by American artist Dorothea Tanning. It was her first major painting and is now in the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Tanning was born in 1910 in Galesburg, Illinois. In 1930 she moved to Chicago to pursue a career as an artist. She briefly took art classes but felt that they were a waste of time, and in 1935 she moved to New York City, where she supported herself as a commercial illustrator. She was deeply inspired by the exhibition “Fantastic Art, Dada and Surrealism” held at New York City’s Museum of Modern Art in 1936, and several years later she painted this self-portrait.
According to her memoirs, Tanning often bought secondhand clothes, and this ruffled purple jacket was from a Shakespearean costume. Coupled with the brown skirt of twigs, it gives her the appearance of a strange bird. There is a strong latent eroticism in the painting, which is less to do with her bare breasts than with the writhing twigs, which on closer inspection contain figures, and the uncertain invitation of the open doors. At her feet is an extraordinary composite creature, which adds an air of menace. The irrational is constantly present in Tanning’s work, and this scene is disturbing because—like any dreamscape—it is at once strange and familiar.
German artist Max Ernst famously visited Tanning’s studio to consider her work for inclusion in an exhibition of women artists to be staged in a studio owned by his wife, Peggy Guggenheim, and was impressed with this painting, which he entitled Birthday. Tanning and Ernst almost immediately began an affair, and they married in 1946.