from Leviathan and the Air-PumpA man whose narratives could be credited as mirrors of reality was a modesty man: his reports ought to make that modest visible.
from "Androgyny: an Interview with Meret Oppenheim" by Robert J. BeltonThat's the Museum of Modern Art for you! But to return to the dogmatism of Breton and others: it was he who named it Déjeuner en fourrure, playing on the association with queer sexuality in Manet's Déjeuner sur l'herbe and Sacher-Masoch's Vénus en fourrures. The word-games of critics, the power struggles of men! So part of its scandalous appeal was not invented by me. It was a fluke. I had been making bits of fur-covered jewelry to make a little money in 1936. I showed a piece to Picasso and Dora Maar and they joked that anything could be covered with fur: the chairs, the door. I added the cups and the saucers on the table. I was thinking only of the contrast of material textures. Later, Breton asked me to participate in the Ratton show. I simply made up the object according to the idea. I didn't care about any title at all. I don't really care that it is now known by Breton's title. NoteMeret Oppenheim's Déjeuner en fourrure is part of the current Museum of Modern Art exhibit, "Modern Starts: People, Places and Things."