Roland Topor

Artist
Roland Topor
Attraction
Pavilion with surreal scenes
Born
1938 - 1997 Paris, France

Topor is best known for his darkly comic illustrations of absurd scenarios published in the French magazine Hara-Kiri.

He co-founded Mouvement panique (“Panic Movement”), staging happenings that attacked the audience with a barrage of sound and movement.

Roman Polanski’s cult classic psychological horror film The Tenant (1976) is based on a novel by Topor of the same name.

Roland Topor and André Heller.

Roland Topor, Pavilion with surreal scenes, exhibited, 1987.

Roland Topor achieved cult status for his macabre cartoons, novels, plays, film and television scripts, and performances. He first gained notoriety for his illustrations published in the subversive French magazine Hara-Kiri, the precursor to Charlie Hebdo, a publication known for its anti-religious discourse.

Roland Topor.

With dark, scatological humor, Topor depicted exaggerated versions of the things hidden from everyday life; his drawings, which depict absurd situations juxtaposing people, animals, plants, and objects, are associated with Surrealism. Works such as Disheveled Thoughts (1967), a black-and-white drawing of a woman slicing her brain like a block of cheese or butter, or his 1968 recasting of Cinderella as a nude woman holding a slipper that doubles as her genitals reflect his fascination with society’s neuroses and fantasies.

With dark, scatological humor, Topor depicted exaggerated versions of the things hidden from everyday life...

In 1962, with artists Fernando Arrabal and Alejandro Jodorowsky, Topor formed the Mouvement panique (“Panic Movement”), staging chaotic happenings involving actions like slitting the throats of geese or attaching snakes to their chests. Topor simultaneously wrote several novels, the most famous of which, Le Locataire Chimérique (“The Tenant”) (1964)—chronicling a man’s descent into paranoia—was adapted into a film by Roman Polanski.

Roland Topor, Pavilion with surreal scenes, exhibited 1987.

Roland Topor, Pavilion with surreal scenes, exhibited 1987.

Topor designed a nightmarish attraction for Luna Luna, which featured a façade covered in graphic, black-and-white illustrations of male characters making distorted faces. Inside, viewers were confronted with surreal scenes, including a man with a colony of worms sprouting from his face, accompanied by a soundtrack of mating whales.