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  1. Learn about Man Ray's rayographs, a unique photographic technique that placed objects directly on photosensitive paper and exposed them to light. See examples of his rayographs and how they influenced the Dadaist and Surrealist movements.

    • Tristan Tzara

      Man Ray was among the instigators of Dada in New York in the...

    • Woman

      Smithsonian American Art Museum and Renwick Gallery....

    • Nancy Cunard

      Resources for Research. The Met's Libraries and Research...

  2. Learn how Man Ray made a photograph without a camera by placing objects on light-sensitive paper. See the details of his rayograph, a self-portrait with a hat, a pipe, and a book.

  3. A large-scale photogram by Man Ray, a surrealist artist who used light and shadow to create abstract images. Learn about the process, the meaning, and the context of this artwork from The Met's collection of photographs.

  4. This rayograph toys with the role of film in photography—instead of developing the film to create a photo in the traditional manner, Man Ray unspooled the roll across the light-sensitive paper to create a spiraling form.

  5. Rayograph was Man Ray's name for photogram, a type of photograph made without a camera or a lens. To make photograms, objects are placed onto light-sensitive paper and then exposed to light. The light areas of the print are where objects have rested on the paper and stopped light exposing the paper.

  6. Learn about Man Ray's rayographs, a type of photogram that he invented in the 1920s. See an example of his rayograph from 1924, a unique gelatin silver print in the Whitney collection.

  7. Title: Rayograph. Artist: Man Ray (American, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1890–1976 Paris) Publisher: Published by Gemini G.E.L. Date: 1966. Medium: Lithograph. Dimensions: Image: 16 9/16 x 13 3/16 in. (42 x 33.5 cm) Sheet: 25 13/16 x 22 1/16 in. (65.5 x 56 cm) Classification: Prints. Credit Line: John B. Turner Fund, 1967. Accession Number: 67 ...