Surrealism was a cultural movement that began in the 1920s known for its visual artworks and writings. It aimed to revolutionize human experience by freeing people from false rationality and restrictive customs. Surrealist works featured surprise and unexpected juxtapositions. Famous surrealist artists included Salvador Dali, Rene Magritte, and Max Ernst who painted dreamlike scenes combining unrelated objects to challenge rational thought.
2. SURREALISM 1920-1965
Surrealism is a cultural movement that began in
the early 1920s, and is best known for its
visual artworks and writings.
3. ORIGIN
The word 'surrealist' was coined by Guillaume Apollinaire and first
appeared in the preface to his play Les Mamelles de TirĂŠsias, which
was written in 1903.
World War I scattered the writers and artists who had been based in
Paris, and in the interim many became involved with Dada, believing
that excessive rational thought and bourgeois values had brought the
conflict of the war upon the world. The Dadaists protested with anti-
art gatherings, performances, writings and art works. After the war,
when they returned to Paris, the Dada activities continued.
During the war, AndrĂŠ Breton, who had trained in medicine and
psychiatry, served in a neurological hospital where he used Sigmund
Freud's psychoanalytic methods with soldiers suffering from shell-shock.
4. Leader AndrĂŠ Breton was explicit in his assertion that Surrealism was, above
all, a revolutionary movement.
Freud's work with free association, dream analysis, and the unconscious was of
utmost importance to the Surrealists in developing methods to liberate
imagination.
Beside the use of dream analysis, they emphasized that âone could combine
inside the same frame, elements not normally found together to produce
illogical and startling effects.â
As they developed their
philosophy, they
believed that
Surrealism would
advocate the idea that
ordinary and depictive
expressions are vital
and important, but that
the sense of their
arrangement must be
open to the full range
of imagination.
5. ⢠SURREALISM could be called
âa juxtaposition of two more
or less distant realities. The
more the relationship
between the two juxtaposed
realities is distant and true,
the stronger the image will
be - the greater its emotional
power and poetic reality.â
⢠The group aimed to
revolutionize human
experience, in its personal,
cultural, social, and political
aspects. They wanted to free
people from false rationality,
and restrictive customs and
structures.
6. The main AIM was to "resolve the previously contradictory
conditions of dream and reality."
Artists painted unnerving, illogical scenes with photographic
precision, created strange creatures from everyday objects
and developed painting techniques that allowed the
unconscious to express itself.
8. Famous artists
⢠Andre Breton
⢠Max Ernst
⢠Hans Bellmer
⢠Salvador Dali
⢠Man Ray
⢠Renee Magritte
⢠Dorothea Tanning
⢠Claude Cahun
⢠Unica Zurn
⢠Lee Miller
9. Two Children are
Threatened by a
Nightingale (1924)
by Max Ernst
⢠The combination of three-
dimensional objects with painted
canvas anticipates Ernst's pioneering
collage techniques.
⢠The composition is typically
Surrealist - fraught with mystery and
dream-inspired symbols: a man on a
rooftop is shown carrying a woman
away; the women on the left holds
weapons and appears to be in
distress; and Ernst claimed that the
startled nightingale referenced both
the death of his sister, and a
hallucination he experienced when
he was ill in bed. Oil on wood with painted wood elements
10. Birthday, 1942
by Dorothea
Tanning
⢠Birthday is a self-portrait that Dorothea
Tanning painted to commemorate her 30th
birthday.
⢠Viewed up close, one notices the infinite
rooms recessing into the background,
symbolizing Tanning's unconscious.
⢠Many Surrealists felt architectural imagery
was well suited to expressing notions of a
labyrinthine self that changes and expands
over time.
⢠Also notable is the gargoyle at the subject's
feet. Tanning said this was her rendition of a
lemur, which has been associated with death
spirits.
⢠Tanning juxtaposed natural imagery, like the
skirt made of roots, against objects
representing high culture, like fancy apparel
and interior design, to both pay homage to
culture and to express nature and wilderness
as a feminine construct.
Oil on canvas - Philadelphia Museum of Art