Title: Surrealism
1Surrealism
- Surrealism is a cultural movement and artistic
style that was founded in 1924 by André Breton.
Surrealism style uses visual imagery from the
subconscious mind to create art without the
intention of logical comprehensibility.
2Surrealism
- The movement was begun primarily in Europe,
centered in Paris, and attracted many of the
members of the Dada community. Influenced by the
psychoanalytical work of Freud and Jung, there
are similarities between the Surrealist movement
and the Symbolist movement of the late 19th
century.
3Surrealism
- Some of the greatest artists of the 20th century
became involved in the Surrealist movement, and
the group included Giorgio de Chirico, Salvador
Dali, René Magritte, and many others. - The Surrealist movement eventually spread across
the globe, and has influenced artistic endeavors
from painting and sculpture to pop music and film
directing.
4Surrealism
- French writer André Breton (1896-1966). At first
a Dadaist, he wrote three manifestos about
Surrealism in 1924, 1930, and 1934, and opened
a studio for "surrealist research."
5manifesto
- manifesto - A public declaration of principles,
policies, or intentions. Although usually of a
political nature, there is a history in art,
especially in modernism during the first half of
the twentieth century, of the spokesmen of
various avant-garde movements publishing
manifestos which declare their theories,
motivations and direction, stimulating support
for them or reactions against them.
6Surrealism
- Influenced by the theories of the pioneer of
psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud (German,
1856-1939), the images found in surrealist works
are as confusing and startling as those of
dreams. Surrealist works can have a realistic,
though irrational style, precisely describing
dreamlike fantasies.
7Surrealism/Psychology
- The artistic style of surrealism began as an
official movement shortly after the end of the
first world war. In its infancy, it was a
literary movement, but soon found its greatest
expression in the visual arts.
8Surrealism/Psychology
- In general, the style focuses on psychological
states which resemble dreams and fantasy.
9Surrealism Influences
- The artists were influenced by psychological
research of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, who
sought to explain the workings of the mind
through analysis of the symbols of dreams.
Instead of using psychoanalysis to cure
themselves of any disturbances, the surrealists
saw the unconscious as a wellspring of untapped
creative ideas.
10Surrealism Influences
- "A dream that is not interpreted is like a letter
that is not opened" is a famous quote from Freud.
The surrealists were less interested in
interpretation of their dream symbols than they
were in the expressive capacity of such
11Surrealism Influences
- The surrealists admired the artwork of the insane
for its freedom of expression, as well as
artworks created by children. They admired
previous artists such as Henri Rousseau, whose
naive and self-taught works always contained an
element of surreal fantasy. In addition, they
looked for inspiration from masters of the
Renaissance such as Hieronymous Bosch and Pieter
Brueghel, whose fantastic elements can easily be
described as surreal.
12Hieronymous Bosch
13Pieter Brueghel
14Henri Rousseau
15Summary
The word "surreal", in fact, means "above
reality". In other words, the artists believed
that there was an element of truth which is
revealed by our subconscious minds which
supercedes the reality of our everyday
consciousness.
16Summary
- Early Surrealist work began with such chance
techniques as rubbing a pencil over a paper
placed on boards to see what the grain would
suggest. Ernst used this technique and also
spread paint at random on canvas and squashed it
with paper to see what the resulting shapes and
textures would suggest.
17Summary
- Such techniques were visual extensions of
Bretons unconscious writing and like Dr.
Rorschachs psychological ink blot tests of 1921,
were exercises in responding to and interpreting
visual data freely.
18Summary
- Later extensions of this approach developed into
sophisticated presentations of logical or
recognizable subject matter in very illogical
situations or weird associations. Much of the
later Surrealism developed around personal
symbols which were unexplained by the artists.
19Salvador Dali(1904-1989)
20Salvador Dali(1904-1989)
- Born on May 11, 1904, Salvador Dali would become
one of the worlds most recognized surrealist
artists. Raised by his lawyer/notary father and a
mother who encouraged her artistic son, Dali grew
up in Figueres, Catalonia, Spain, having been
told by his parents that he was the reincarnation
of his older brother, Salvador, who died just
nine months before Dalis birth.
21Salvador Dali(1904-1989)
- Following the death of his mother to breast
cancer in 1921, Dali moved to the student
residences at the School of Fine Arts in Madrid.
He spent several years studying there and then
shortly before his graduation, he was expelled
for declaring that no one on the faculty of the
school was competent enough to examine him.
22Salvador Dali(1904-1989)
- By 1931, Dali had collaborated on a short film
with surrealist director Luis Bunuel illustrated
a book called The Witches of Liers, a poem
written by his friend and classmate Carles Fages
de Climent met his muse and future wife Gala
and painted arguably his most famous work The
Persistence of Memory. He had officially joined
the surrealist group in Paris, and was hailed by
the surrealist community of artists.
23Salvador Dali(1904-1989)
- When Salvador Dali openly supported the regime of
Francisco Franco following the Spanish Civil war,
and showed interest in what he referred to as the
Hitler phenomenon, he became somewhat of an
outcast among his fellow artists. Many of his
fellow surrealists referred to Dali in past
tense, indicating their feeling that he was dead
to them. He wrote prolifically during this time,
and continued producing his art.
24Salvador Dali(1904-1989)
- In 1940, Dali and Gala moved to the United
States, and it was during this time that Dali
reclaimed his Catholic faith. In 1942, Dali wrote
his autobiography, The Secret Life of Salvador
Dali. He asked an Italian monk to perform an
exorcism on him in the late
25Salvador Dali(1904-1989)
- 1940s, and in exchange for the exorcism, he
presented the friar with a sculpture of Jesus
Christ on the cross, which was not discovered
until 2005. Although they had been married
civilly in 1934, Dali and Gala were married in
the Catholic Church in 1958.
26Salvador Dali(1904-1989)
- In the late 1940s, Dali and Gala returned to
Spain. Dali continued a prolific career in art,
being one of the first artists to use holography
and taking great inspiration from his Catholic
faith and the events of the day, including the
bombing at Hiroshima. From this time period, two
of Dalis most famous works, Hallucinogenic
Toreador and La Gare de Perpignan were created.
27Dali
- Dalis work was used in advertising campaigns,
most notably for Chupa Chups candy and Lanvin
chocolates, and he became fascinated by DNA and
the hypercube, which can be seen in some of his
later work
28Salvador Dali(1904-1989)
- King Juan Carlos of Spain bestowed upon Dali the
title Marquis of Pubol in 1982. By this time,
Dali was seriously ill, having been given
unprescribed medicine by his senile wife Gala.
The medications damaged Dalis nervous system and
gave him Parkinsons like tremors in his hands.
29- Gala died in 1982, leaving the stricken Dali
devastated. He was brought back to Figueres in
1984 by friends who felt a deliberate dehydration
of the artist and a fire in his bedroom were
suicide attempts.
30Salvador Dali(1904-1989)
- On January 23, 1989, Salvador Dali, known for his
contributions not only to surrealism, but also to
fashion, theatre, and photography, died from
heart failure. He is buried in a crypt at his
Teatro Museo de Figueres, just steps from his
childhood home.
31The Persistence of Memory 1931
32The Persistence of Memory
- The Persistence of Memory almost stands alone as
a symbol of the movement. The melted clocks
represent the strange warping of time which
occurs when we enter the dream state. The
stretched image of a man's face which is at the
center of the painting is believed to be that of
Dali himself, and the landscape which stretches
out behind the scene may perhaps represent his
birthplace, Catalonia.
33Metamorphis of Narcissus 1937
34Metamorphosis of Narcissus
- The Metamorphosis of Narcissus plays on the
classical theme about a beautiful young man who
admires his own reflection in a pool of water.
Transfixed by his own beauty, he turns to stone.
Always the master of illusion, Dali creates a
double-image, where the boy's form is repeated as
an enlarged hand holding an egg which bursts
forth with a narcissus flower.
35The Hallucinogenic Torreador 1969
36The Hallucinogenic Torreador
- The Hallucinogenic Torreador is perhaps Dali's
most successful painting involving multiple
hidden images. A complete analysis of the
painting would be a complex undertaking. It
primarily focuses on the torreador
(bull-fighter), whose face is hidden within the
repeated representation of the Venus de Milo.
37The Hallucinogenic Torreador
- The upper portion of the painting contains the
bull-fighter's arena, again surrounded by
multiple images of the goddess. There is also a
hidden image of the bull in the lower left
quadrant of the painting (drinking water from a
pool), and an image of a boy (possibly a
self-portrait as a child, as his clothing
represents the approximate time period of his
boyhood).
38Crucifixion 1954
39The Crucifixion
- The Crucifixion is another powerful painting. The
innovation of a floating cross which intersects
Christ's body gives an illusion of another
dimension. A shocking aspect of this painting is
that the representation is believed to be a
self-portrait. The single figure who stands in
adoration is believed to be that of his wife,
Gala (who often appeared in his paintings).