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French painter and photographer
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Pierre Molinier
👁 An older man with graying hair and formal attire leans toward a figure with a mannequin head with dramatic makeup
Molinier, date unknown
Born(1900-04-13)13 April 1900
Agen, France
Died3 March 1976(1976-03-03) (aged 75)
Bordeaux, France
Known forPainting, photography
Notable work
  • Cent photographies érotiques
  • Le chaman et ses créatures
MovementSurrealism
Spouse
Andrea Lafaye
(m. 1931)​
Children2
Signature
👁 Image

Pierre Molinier (13 April 1900 – 3 March 1976) was a French painter, photographer and "maker of objects". Integrated into the Surrealist movement in 1955 through André Breton, he became known for erotic imagery that merged sexuality, fetishism, and religious ritual. In the final decade of his life, he created photomontages in which he appeared as a transvestite figure, combining his body with mannequins to produce provocative works that challenged social taboos.

Early life and education

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Pierre Molinier was born in Agen, France, and spent most of his life in Bordeaux. He began his artistic career as a landscape painter and took up photography at the age of 18. Before this, he had apprenticed with his father and with Pierre Augustin de Fumadelles, a sculptor.

Following his military service from 1921 to 1922, Molinier traveled to Paris to study and copy masterworks. In Paris, Molinier reportedly avoided overexposure to major works of art, regarding it as part of a personal philosophy on "how to create a work of art."[1]

Molinier's interests in esotericism developed after World War I, when he joined a masonic order known as the Brotherhood. During this period, he became fascinated with ancient Egyptian and Indian religions, as well as Satanism.[2]

Career

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Surrealist period

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Molinier's work evolved from landscape painting to erotic imagery with fetishistic themes. In 1955, he established contact with leading surrealist André Breton and sent him photographs of his paintings. He was subsequently integrated into the Surrealist group, and by 1959, his work was included in the International Surrealist Exhibition. The Surrealists described the purpose of his art as "for my own stimulation", a sentiment later reflected in a provocative contribution to the 1965 exhibition: a dildo.

Photographic work

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Between 1965 and his death in 1976, Molinier documented his exploration of transgressive and transsexual themes in the photo series Cent photographies érotiques. These black-and-white images often depicted scenes of pain and pleasure, and featured Molinier himself, either with female models or lifelike mannequins. Using a remote control shutter, he posed as a transvestite figure dressed in fishnet stockings, suspender belts, stiletto heels, masks, and corsets. Many compositions employed photomontage to produce surreal amalgamations of limbs and bodies.

During the final 11 years of his life, Molinier staged many of his most intimate and provocative works in the "theatre" of his Bordeaux boudoiratelier. He intended these photographs to shock, encouraging viewers to respond with either excitement or disgust.

Artistic philosophy

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He stated that his erotic work was created for personal stimulation: "In painting, I was able to satisfy my leg and nipple fetishism." He claimed that his sexual attraction focused not on gender but on specific features, especially hairless legs in black stockings. Regarding his use of dolls, Molinier remarked: "While a doll can function as a substitute for a woman, there is no movement, no life. This has a certain charm if one is before a beautiful corpse. The doll can, but does not have to become the substitute for a woman."[2]

Molinier frequently explored connections between religious ritual and sexuality, which he believed had been repressed by post-Renaissance moral codes. He styled himself as a transvestite Baudelaire who expressed his ideas through objects—corsets, masks, and chains—rather than words. He sought to subvert conventional morality and aesthetic norms, likening himself to a jester who challenged social taboos. He also referenced ancient shamanic traditions in his work. His experimentation with sexual transformation was, in his view, an attempt to reclaim a primordial androgynous ideal. His planned autobiography was to have been titled The Shaman and His Creatures.

Personal life

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Molinier married Andrea Lafaye on 7 July 1931 in Bordeaux.[3] They had two children, a daughter and a son.[4]

Death

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In the 1970s, his health began to decline. Molinier died by suicide on 3 March 1976, shooting himself in his Bordeaux apartment where he had lived for over forty years.[5][6]

His epitaph reads: "Here lies Pierre Molinier. He was a man without morals."[1]

See also

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References

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Citations

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  1. ^ a b Molinier, Pierre (1977). Pierre Molinier. Winnipeg: Plug In Editions.
  2. ^ a b Neidich, Warren (2003). Blow-up: Photography, Cinema and the Brain. New York: D.A.P.
  3. ^ "Birth record of Pierre Molinier, nº 94, page 34/370". Archives départementales de Lot-et-Garonne. Archived from the original on 4 November 2016. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  4. ^ Petit 1992, pp. 13, 199.
  5. ^ Rimanelli, David (May 2022). "Portfolio: Pierre Molinier, Paintings". Artforum. 60 (9). Retrieved 17 March 2026.
  6. ^ Petit 1992, p. 208.

Works cited

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  • Borde, Raymond; Breton, André (1964). Pierre Molinier (in French). Paris: Le Terrain Vague. OCLC 990148556.
  • Gorsen, Peter; Molinier, Pierre (1972). Pierre Molinier, lui-même (in French). Munich: Rogner & Bernhard. OCLC 1008178323.
  • Molinier, Pierre (1979). Cent photographies érotiques (in French). Paris: Obliques. ISBN 978-2-86380-007-2.
  • Molinier, Pierre (1995). Le chaman et ses créatures (in French). 96 pp.; preface by Molinier, introduction by Roland Villeneuve; includes photomontages, drawings, and reproductions of paintings. Bordeaux: William Blake & Co. ISBN 978-2-84103-033-0.
  • Petit, Pierre (1992). Molinier, une vie d'enfer [Molinier, a Life in Hell] (in French). Paris: Ramsay/Jean-Jacques Pauvert. ISBN 978-2-84041-014-0.
  • Petit, Pierre (2000). Molinier, une vie d'enfer [モリニエ, 地獄の一生涯 / Morinie jigoku no isshōgai] (in Japanese). Translation of 1992 French edition; 300 pp., 86 ill. Kyoto: Jimbun Shoin. ISBN 978-4-409-10013-4.
  • Petit, Pierre (2005). Pierre Molinier et la tentation de l'Orient (in French). 64 pp., 24 ill. Bordeaux: Opales / Pleine Page éditeurs. ISBN 978-2-908799-79-8.
  • Oudin, Alain (2006). Molinier, une vie magique (in French). 205 pp. Paris: Édition en ligne Enseigne-des-Oudin.
  • Sesquès, Michelle; Petit, Pierre (2012). Moi, petit vampire de Molinier (in French). 76 pp., 1 ill.; interview by Michelle Sesquès; introduction and notes by Pierre Petit. Monplaisir: Éditions Monplaisir. ISBN 979-10-91213-01-1.

External links

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