Leonora in the Morning Light + Q&A

Film details
| Film Title | Leonora in the Morning Light + Q&A |
|---|---|
| Suitability | |
| Genre | |
| Length | 103mins |
| Year | 2025 |
| Country | Germany, Mexico, Romania, United Kingdom |
| Director | Thor Klein, Lena Vurma |
| Actors | Olivia Vinall, Alexander Scheer, Cassandra Ciangherotti, Ryan Gage, István Téglás, Luis Gerardo Méndez, Denis Eyriey, Cat Jugravu, Wren Stembridge, Mercedes Bahleda, Enrique Carréon Carrasco |
| AKA | Leonora im Morgenlicht |
| Showings |
Defiant, brilliant, and untamable, Leonora Carrington refused to live by anyone’s rules but her own. In the charged atmosphere of 1930s Paris, she falls under the spell of the Surrealist movement – and into a passionate, volatile love affair with the German artist Max Ernst. Together, they create a world where art and life blur, surrounded by icons like André Breton and Salvador Dalí, and build an otherworldly refuge in the south of France filled with sculpted creatures and strange, living dreams. But as war engulfs Europe, their fantasy shatters. Ernst is arrested as an enemy alien, and Leonora is thrust into a nightmare of loss, madness, and survival. Fleeing to Spain, she spirals into psychological torment and endures brutal institutional treatment. Emerging scarred but unbroken, Leonora finds her way to Mexico – a place of magic and rebirth – where she reclaims her art, her identity, and her freedom.
Leonora in the Morning Light is the story of a woman who turned trauma into transcendence, creating beauty from chaos and forging a legacy that changed the history of modern art, making her currently the highest-selling female British artist.
We are delighted to announce that we will joined on the day by directors Thor Klein and Lena Vurma. They will be hosting a Q&A immediately following the film.
This is a flawless film surrounded by superb direction, excellent performances, and breathtaking visuals
an intellectual mood board of her life for us: a dense collage of referents auguring belatedly appreciated work, putting her place in the previously male-dominated art canon beyond doubt.





