
Leonora Carrington work painted during psychiatric confinement to go on show for first time
A recently discovered painting by surrealist artist Leonora Carrington, titled *Villa Pilar* (1940), will be publicly displayed for the first time this summer in London. Carrington created the work while confined in a Spanish psychiatric hospital during World War II, after fleeing Nazi-occupied France and suffering a psychological breakdown. The painting depicts the hospital as a symbolic underworld and was given to her psychiatrist, Dr. Luis Morales, as a parting gift. It remained in his family for decades until researchers rediscovered it while preparing an exhibition for the Faro Santander arts center. The work will debut at the Freud Museum in London as part of the exhibition *Leonora Carrington – the Symptomatic Surreal*, which has been extended through August before traveling to Spain.

