The Painting
Modeled after a De Chirico....
shareAnd painted by Man Ray, no less.
shareThe trivia section says that Man Ray 'painted the paintings'. I am not sure this is quite right. Albert Lewin asked his friend Man Ray to produce the portrait, but evidently the result wasn't acceptable - it looked like this: http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-S0OqAblM-DM/TkViOFFiSwI/AAAAAAAAD90/Av4d6jJN 88w/s1600/Ava+Gardner+%2527Pandora%2527+and+Man+Ray%252C+1950+%255B2%2 55D.jpg
Man Ray did take the photograph used for the miniature of Van der Zee's wife - http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-Db4ysrRpK8A/TkVgqVIIgwI/AAAAAAAAD9s/AmX5pZDf 6K8/s1600/Pandora.jpg - as well as a similar striking photograph which was not used in the film - http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-PonvegiMpvU/TkVbWz2QZ4I/AAAAAAAAD9o/4OMm03gk _Is/s1600/Man+Ray+%257E+Ava+Gardner+%2527Pandora%2527%252C+1950+%255B2 %255D.jpg
The painting in the film - http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-0WtHZ5y5vWE/TkXiZP_b5eI/AAAAAAAAD-c/1uP5PDG2 5CE/s1600/Ferdinand+Bellan+%255B1%255D.jpg - is the work of Ferdinand Bellan, who worked as a set designer (though apparently not as such on PATFD). The script requires the painting to demonstrate "the most fantastic coincidence imaginable" of being a portrait of Pandora (ie Ava Gardner). But the painting which we see merely bears some resemblance to her, so in terms of the film it's not very satisfactory. Real-life Dutchman Bert Pfeiffer should have got the gig! http://www.smithsonianmag.com/multimedia/photos/?c=y&articleID=121 959729
"I beseech ye in the bowels of Christ, think that ye may be mistaken."
thank you for the information, denham
shareBellan's painting definitely captures Ava Gardner better than Man Ray's...several outdoor scenes in the film have a de Chirico look to them
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