Skip to main contentBiographyToyen, a Czech/French Surrealist painter, was born in Prague as Maria Čermínová. She adopted the name Toyen while still an adolescent. It is genderless and may have associations with ‘citoyen’. In the early 1920s she joined the Devětsil group of radical artists and writers, and went to Paris in 1925 with her partner, the poet and painter Jindřich Štyrský (1899–1942). In 1926 they exhibited what they called ‘artificialist’ paintings. On returning to Prague they moved closer to Surrealism and became drawn to revolutionary politics. Štyrský died in 1942 during the German occupation. In 1947, Toyen moved to Paris where she remained until her death and was acclaimed by André Breton. She was fascinated by the Marquis de Sade. His ruined ancestral home, the Château de la Coste, appears in many of her paintings, including her most, celebrated work, Au Château de la Coste (1946). (SOURCE: Glaves-Smith and Chilvers, A Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Art (3 ed.), accessed 12/13/16)
Toyen
Czech, 1902 - 1980
Person TypeIndividual
American, born Austria, Wiener Hagenbund, 1895 – 1977
Dutch, c. 1565 - 1637