Surrealism

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    Surrealism is a popular and very interesting art type. There have been many great artist who practiced this art type. The surrealism boom was between 1920 and 1930. The surrealism movement was started in 1924, and was founded in the amazing city of Paris. It was started by the artist Andre Breton. This was an art type where the artist really drew or painted what was in their mind and their imagination. Artist had the chance to express a meaning in a very different way with this form of artwork.…

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    Salvador Dali Influences

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    “Surrealism is destructive, but it destroys only what it considers to be shackles limiting our vision.”(Salvador Dalí). Dalí is considered one of the most prestigious artists of all time. He has created some of the best works of art, such as, The Persistence of Memory, and, Swans Reflecting Elephants. He is one of the founders of the surrealist movement, taking real life objects and placing them into a dreamlike setting. Even after his death, he still influences several different artists today.…

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    Salvador Dali Salvador Dali The Persistence of Memory Metamorphosis of Narcissus The Ecumenical Council Surrealism was a time period that started in 1924 and ended in 1966. It scorned the idea of rationalism or writings of realism, and heavily used psychoanalysis. They had elements of primitivism and mythism as well as they went to treat the unconcious mind. They thought that rationality was a…

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    Max Ernst's Art

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    Camfield the author of the article “Max Ernst: Dada & the Dawn of Surrealism” wrote his opinion about Ernst works and also quoted the opinion of Andre Breton about Ernst’s artwork. Breton said “introduced an entirely original scheme of visual structure; yet they corresponded exactly to the intentions of Lautreamont and Rimbaud…

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    Surrealism by definition is, “the principles, ideals, or practice of producing fantastic or incongruous imagery or effects in art, literature, film, or theater by means of unnatural or irrational juxtapositions and combinations” ( Merriam-Webster., web). One may could say Salvador Dali took this to heart in most if not all of his art pieces. The idea of juxtaposition, or the putting together items that would not naturally be together. One example of this from Dali’s catalog would be The Burning…

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    whether or not they are simply different branches of the same movement, that surrealism is just a romanticised extension of the avant-garde. André Breton, the movement’s considered leader, regarded surrealism as a belief in superior forms of reality in his 1924 Surrealist Manifesto, and irrespective of more contemporary arguments over the exact definition or difference, was above all explicit in his assertion that Surrealism was a revolutionary movement. It is challenging to define the…

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    Salvador Dali Influences

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    Born May 4th 1989, Salvador Felipe Jacinto Dali Y Domenech (A.K.A) Salvador Dali was going to introduce the next generation of what is known as Surrealism. During the late 1900’s Salvador Dali was enrolled in a public school where ironically spent his days dreaming rather than studying. As every parent would, Dali’s father acknowledge Dali’s lack of academic interest and decided to send him to a French speaking school. However, as time elapsed his parents then discovered the talent that Dali…

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    Magritte’s ‘The treachery of images’ 1929 painting. I will be weighing up the positives and negatives of both the sculpture and painting and finally concluding my essay with my opinion. Renne Magritte’s ‘The treachery of images’ is a painting that of surrealism, which creates a three-way irony of an object that corresponds to words and image. The painting itself is a pipe, with a phrase in French “Ceci n’est pas une pipe” which translate to “This is not a pipe.” This phrase causes a confusion…

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    Salvador Dali Born in May 11, 1904 in Figures, Spain, Salvador Dali eccentric nature and talent for self promotion made him the most famous representative of the surrealist movement and one of the most recognized artists in the world. At the age of six-teen Dali’s mother passed away having a profound effect on him because in his mind there were two tragedies, the lost of his beloved mother and the fear that one day she would be forgotten when he vowed to never be forgotten. In 1922, Dali moved…

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    enhance artistic creativity” (biography.com). “Dali was the most prominent representative of the Surrealist Movement. The ‘Persistence of Memory’ is his most celebrated piece, though his ‘Lobster Telephone’ and ‘Mae West Lips Sofa’ are icons of Surrealism”…

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