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The Surrealists: Max Ernst and Joan Miro

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Title: The Surrealists: Max Ernst and Joan Miro


1
The Surrealists Max Ernst and Joan Miro
2
  • Max Ernst

3
Max Ernst Early Life
  • B. 1891 in Brühl, Germany.
  • Enrolled in the University of Bonn to study
    philosophy, art history, psychology and
    literature in 1909
  • Decided to become a painter in 1911
  • Became involved with the artists surrounding
    August Macke, an expressionist painter
  • Exhibited for the first time in 1912 with Mackes
    group, Die Rheinischen Expressionisten (The
    Rhineland Expressionists)

4
Max Ernst Early L ife (cont.)
  • Wrote art criticism for the newspaper Volksmund
    in the summer and fall of 1912
  • Enlisted in the Twenty-third Field Artillery
    Regiment in Koblenz on August 24, 1914.
  • Served from July 1915 to March 1916 in the
    artillery division
  • Suffered minor head and hand injuries
  • Granted a military leave of absence and exhibited
    over fifty works in a two man exhibit in January
    1916.

5
Dada Years
  • Exhibit entitled Max Ernst George Muche
  • Continued to publish articles on art during the
    war
  • Married Luise Amelie Straus, an art historian on
    October 17, 1918
  • Settled in Cologne in 1918
  • Created and led the Cologne Dada group with
    Johannes Theodor Baargeld in autumn 1919
  • Produced first collages in 1919

6
Ernst in military uniform, c. 1914-1918
7
Fatagaga 1920
8
Le Limacon de Chambre 1920
9
Un peu malade le cheval patte pelu.. 1920
10
Dada Years (cont.)
  • Dada A western Europe artistic and literary
    movement (1916-23) that sought the discovery of
    authentic reality through the abolition of
    traditional culture and aesthetic forms.
  • Cologne Dadaists experimented with photomontage,
    use of everyday objects as artistic materials,
    and incoherent juxtapositions
  • On April 12, 1920 Ernst Baargeld published Die
    Schammade, a major publication of the Cologne
    Dadaists

11
Dada Years (cont.)
  • Ernst was the center of the Cologne Dada
    movement, and called himself Dada Ernst
  • Believed that Dada had an honest side under its
    absurdity
  • Organized a 1920 exhibit of his collages at the
    Au Sans Pareil bookstore
  • In 1920 a Dada exhibit was closed by the Cologne
    police on grounds of obscenity
  • The charges were eventually dropped and the
    exhibit was reopened

12
Dada siegt! 1920
13
New Techniques
  • Ernsts son Ulrich was born on June 24, 1920
  • Ernst moved to Paris (abandoning his wife and
    child) in 1922 and began to paint reliefs
  • Reliefs Projections of figures or forms from a
    flat background, as in sculpture, or the apparent
    projection of such shapes in a painting or
    drawing.
  • Ernst collaborated with poet Paul Eluard on a
    book of poetry and collages called The
    Misfortunes of the Immortals.
  • Book released on July 25, 1922

14
Au rendez-vous des amis 1922
15
Two Children Are Threatened by a Nightingale.
1924
16
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17
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18
New Techniques
  • In the summer of 1925 Ernst perfected his
    frottage technique
  • In this technique, Ernst first rubbed paper with
    black lead.
  • He next applied layers of paint, with the darkest
    layer last.
  • Ernst them scraped away the layers to reveal the
    lightest color.

19
The Forest, 1927,-1928
20
Ernst demonstrating his frottage technique, 1963
21
New Techniques
  • Ernst also employed his own version of
    Decalcomania developed by surrealist painter
    Oscar Dominguez.
  • In this technique, paper or paint was applied to
    the surface of glass, and then peeled away.
  • Most surrealists left the spontaneous design
    untouched, but Ernst modified his pieces to show
    cities, forests, and animal forms.

22
Later Years
  • Over the next few years Ernst would experiment
    with some of his favorite themes
  • Torn shapes, bird-people, transfigured forests or
    cities, apparitions and landscaped of crystals
    and shells.
  • Ernst was accused of spying and interned at a
    camp in Milles, but managed to escape to New
    York.

23
Later Years (cont.)
  • While in New York, Ernst contributed to the
    drip style of painting that would be used in
    the future by abstract expressionists
  • Ernst lives in Arizona until 1949 with his new
    wife, Dorothea Tanning
  • He sculpted and painted deserts with crystalline
    structures
  • Ernst accepted a prize in painting from the
    Venice Biennale in 1954

24
Ernst with wife Dorothea Tanning, 1948
25
Europe After the Rain, 1940-1942
26
Later Years (cont.)
  • Ernst returned to France in 1953, and by this
    time had acquired international acclaim
  • His later work included collages made from
    everyday objects such as lace, cages, and
    blowtorches, frottages, and bronze sculptures.
  • Ernst died on April 1, 1976.
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