Mimi Parent (September 8, 1924 – June 14, 2005) was a groundbreaking surrealist artist whose bold, immersive creations redefined the boundaries of art and performance. Born in Montreal, Canada, she studied at the École des Beaux-Arts before being expelled for her involvement in the radical art group Prisme d’yeux. In 1948, she moved to Paris, where she immersed herself in the thriving surrealist scene and earned the prestigious Cézanne medal.
Parent became a central figure in the Paris Surrealist Group, working closely with André Breton and other luminaries of the movement. Her signature works—three-dimensional tableaux boxes known as “picture-objects”—merged mythology, folklore, and personal symbolism. These enigmatic constructions often incorporated human hair, dolls, and found objects, transforming everyday materials into haunting dreamscapes that challenged perceptions of femininity and the unconscious.
In 1959, she played a leading role in organizing the controversial EROS exhibition, contributing surrealist objects, a provocative catalog design, and the iconic poster “Masculine-Féminine.” That same year, she performed in Jean Benoît’s notorious surrealist ritual “The Execution of the Testament of the Marquis de Sade,” further cementing her position as a daring and theatrical force in the movement. Her lifelong artistic partnership with Benoît, whom she married in 1948, was marked by a shared vision of surrealism as both art and lived experience.
Beyond the gallery, Parent was politically active, producing anti-Gaullist posters in the 1960s and participating in the May 1968 protests. Her work continued to evolve throughout her life, with solo and group exhibitions in Europe and North America, including at the Centre Pompidou, Tate Modern, and Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec.
Mimi Parent’s legacy endures as a powerful voice in postwar surrealism—a creator of psychological theaters, a challenger of norms, and a woman who brought fierce imagination to both art and activism.
 
			 
    	 
			




















