
La machine à écrire: pièce en trois actes (The Typewriter: A Play in Three Acts)
<p>Jean Cocteau’s <em>Typewriter</em> is a play in the style of a detective drama about twin brothers (both played by Cocteau’s lover Jean Marais in its premiere run), and a series of anonymous letters exposing the community’s misdeeds. Similar to Cocteau’s other productions of the time, <em>Typewriter</em> faced many difficulties before opening. The political climate of Nazi-occupied France in 1941 was actively hostile toward avant-garde artists such as Cocteau, and the fact he was publically homosexual put a target on his back. During an open dress rehearsal, the show was ambushed by pro-fascist protestors who threw smoke bombs on stage, leading the theater to temporarily cancel the show.</p> <p>Ambiguity became a survival tactic for artists during this period, as evidenced in Mary Reynolds’s book design. The front and back covers feature capital letters “M” in red and black type, randomly scattered across the surface, but it’s not clear what the “M” stands for. It could refer to “machine” as seen in the original French title. Or, it could stand in for Maxime, one half of the twins who are the main focus of the show, or Margot, another prominent character. More personally, the “M” could point to “Marais,” the actor who plays the twins and Cocteau’s lover, or even Mary herself (or her lover, Marcel). Reynolds’s usual gilded-stamped text with Cocteau’s signature star underneath grace the spine, offsetting the mysterious and haphazard “M’s” with a stabilizing title and author.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1941
- Dimensions
- 19.1 × 12.8 × 2.9 cm (7 9/16 × 5 1/16 × 1 3/16 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Mary Reynolds
Artist
Textile
Mary Reynolds was an American artist and bookbinder active in Paris during the mid-twentieth century. Working primarily in hand-bound volumes and paper arts, she developed a distinctive practice that merged fine art with the craft tradition of bookbinding. Her work bridged Surrealist circles and the material culture of the book object itself. This profile will be expanded as more verified source material becomes available.
Full artist profile →More
More by Mary Reynolds

Saint Glinglin: précédé d'une nouvelle version de Gueule de Pierre et des Temps mêlés: Roman (Saint Glinglin: Preceded by a New Version of Stone Mouth and Mingled Time)
1949 · Full green morocco binding; horizontal onlay across covers and spine; broken china teacup handle attached by onlay to spine; title stamped in gold on front cover; author stamped in gold on back cover; marbled endpapers; original paper covers bound in

Exercices de style
1947 · Quarter black calfskin binding with marbled paper; calfskin label on cover with title stamped in gold; author stamped in gold on spine; top edge colored; marbled endpapers; original paper covers bound in

Le Diable au corps: Roman
1947 · Chêneuarter vellum binding with green paper; morocco spine label with author and title stamped in gold; decorated endpapers; original paper covers bound in

Le Foyer des artistes
1947 · One-quarter vellum binding, sides covered with red paper speckled with gold stars; original paper covers bound in

Le surmâle: Roman moderne (Superman: A Modern Novel)
1945 · Full black morocco binding with onlay; metal corset stay attached to spine; title stamped in gold on spine; mauve endpapers printed with wire-mesh pattern; original paper covers bound in

Loin de Rueil (Skin of Dreams)
1944 · Full red morocco binding with raised bands; author and title stamped in gold on spine; endpapers of trial proofs for Marcel Duchamp's 1935 cover of Minotaure; original paper covers bound in
Record
Verified by Watts Index- Artist
- Mary Reynolds
- Year
- 1941
- Dimensions
- 19.1 × 12.8 × 2.9 cm (7 9/16 × 5 1/16 × 1 3/16 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1941-047774
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified