Rene Magritte Personal Values 1952

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
S4 Dada and Surrealism.
Advertisements

Schools of Thought on The Metamorphosis
Surrealism was born soon after Dadaism, and blossomed in Europe and the United States in the '20s and '30s. It first began as a literary movement by André.
ENGL 2020 Themes in Literature and Culture: The Grotesque Dada & Surrealism Dada & Surrealism.
SURREALISM ( ). HERONYMUS BOSCH Hieronymus Bosch, (Latinised) Jheronimus Bosch; birth name Jeroen van Aken) (c – August 9, 1516) was an.
SURREAL SCENES. Perspective Drawing During the Renaissance artists became interested in making two-dimensional (flat) artwork look three- dimensional.
Surrealism VISUAL ARTS S. RICHARDSON. Surrealism sought to free the imaginative human mind and reveal the unconscious, encouraging radical change and.
And artist RENE MAGRITTE
The art movement that challenged rational thought and reality.
A Surreal Look at Salvador Dali
Bell Ringer – 11/17/14 What is Surrealism?. Surrealism 1924.
SURREALISM: n. Pure psychic automatism, by which it is intended to express, verbally, in writing, or by other means, the real process of thought. Thought's.
Surrealism.
Term first used in 1917 by Guillaume Apollinaire in the program notes of his ballet Began as a literary movement strongly allied to Dadaism Originated.
SURREALISM Art 2. OVERVIEW  Movement was created by Poet Andre Breton in 1924  Major Players included…  Max Ernst  Joan Miro  Salvador Dali  Rene.
Surrealism Art History Ms. Blaylock Kay Sage. An “ism” is a suffix at the end of many English words. It comes from Greek “ismos” and Latin “ismus”. You.
Ca SURREALISM. WHAT IS SURREALISM? An art movement completely different from anything that came before it. “Revolutionary” in spirit, according.
Observation and Fantasy
Salvador Dali Contemporary Surrealist Mrs. Fox.
SURREALISM Dali, The Crucifixion, 1958.
SURREALISM SURREALISM A style of art and literature developed principally in the 20 th century, in which fantastic visual imagery from the subconscious.
SURREALISM A 20th-century avant-garde movement in Art and Literature that sought to release the creative potential of the unconscious mind.
SURREALISM ART Your Subtitle Goes Here. Background Founded in 1924 by André Breton (Surrealist Manifesto) Manifesto stated: it was the means of uniting.
Surrealism Originally a literary movement, it explored dreams, the unconscious, the element of chance and multiple levels of reality. “more than.
COLLABORATIVE PROJECT FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
SURREALISM And the artist: RENE MAGRITTE. Surrealism is a 20th-century literary and artistic movement Surrealism is a 20th-century literary and artistic.
The works of Rene Magritte. Rene Magritte Castle in The Pyrenees 1959.
Surrealism Originally a literary movement, it explored dreams, the unconscious, the element of chance and multiple levels of reality. “more than.
Surrealist Portfolio: Grade 11. Surrealism: A 20th century art style in which artists combine normally unrelated objects and situations. A 20th century.
Surrealist Portfolio: Grade 11. Surrealism: A 20th century art style in which artists combine normally unrelated objects and situations. A 20th century.
Surrealist Portfolio: Grade 11. Surrealism: Stemmed from the Dada movement (1916), which protested the madness of war (immediately after WWI). Dadaists.
Surrealism 1920s-30s Sigmund Freud, The Interpretation of Dreams, 1900 Andre Breton, The Surrealist Manifesto, 1924 Night-dream picture-puzzle Psychic.
What is Surrealism?  surrealists were a group of artists and writers who got together in Paris in the early 1920’s  Started with group automatic writing.
Surrealism An art movement which began in the 1920’s that used dreamlike or fantasy images as its subject matter.
Surrealism “Surrealism is destructive, but it destroys only what it considers to be shackles limiting our vision.” -Salvador Dali.
SURREALISM Most Dada artists joined the Surrealist movement as well Included many similar ideas -used Dada techniques to “release the unconscious” Exploration.
Surrealism Originally a literary movement, it explored dreams, the unconscious, the element of chance and multiple levels of reality. “more than.
Surrealism In art, what can that possibly mean?. imagination or fantasy. Surrealism was started in the 1920s. Paintings focus on things found in the imagination.
Surrealism 1924 – 1950s (between World Wars I & II) Surrealism is a 20th-century art movement that attempted to express the workings of the subconscious.
Dada, Surrealism, and Suprematism AKA Dada and some more Isms Rebekah Scoggins Art Appreciation April 9, 2013.
SURREAL SCENES.
Magritte and Surrealism
Art Project: Surrealism
The New Psychology and the Visual Arts
Surrealism Originally a literary movement, it explored dreams, the unconscious, the element of chance and multiple levels of reality. “ more than.
  (SURREALISM) An introduction for reading The Metamorphoses.
SURREALISM Dali, The Crucifixion, SURREALISM
Surrealism PROJECT The point at which the waking state joins sleep -André Breton DATE DECEMBER 14, 2011 CLIENT LEE HONORS COLLEGE SENIOR THESIS.
Surrealism.
Dada and Surrealism.
Surrealism.
Surrealism.
Surrealism.
Surrealism: RE-ACTIONS TO MODERNITY
Surrealism 1924.
Surrealism ( s).
SURREALISM.
Letting go of ‘reality’
Surrealism in Art Ms. Mitat.
Surrealism Painting Art Tech 1201.
And the artist: RENE MAGRITTE
And artist RENE MAGRITTE
The first Surrealist manifesto was written by Andre Breton and released to the public in The document defines Surrealism as: "Psychic automatism.
Surrealism.
An introduction to surrealism
Surrealism ( s).
Perspectives I Art - Milito
Surrealism 1924.
Surrealism 1924.
Presentation transcript:

Rene Magritte Personal Values 1952 http://virtualart.admin.tomsk.ru/magritte/p-magritte16.htm Rene Magritte Personal Values 1952

http://users3.ev1.net/~rooftopyawp/dalisleep.html Salvador Dali Sleep 1937

Surrealism

This book became central to the Surrealist movement. At the beginning of the 20th century the study of psychology – the workings of the mind – was developing. In 1919 Dr Sigmund Freud published a book called The Interpretation of Dreams, which claimed that dreams symbolically express our underlying desires. Freud identified a part of the human mind where memories and our most basic instincts are stored and, because we are mostly unaware of it, called it the unconscious. This book became central to the Surrealist movement. http://ebookee.org/The-Interpretation-of-Dreams-The-Complete-and-Definitive-Text_465810.html

The Manifesto of Surrealism A group of artists and writers drew on ideas of Dada & Sigmund Freud and began the Surrealist movement. In 1924, Andre Breton wrote his Manifesto of Surrealism explaining their aims and beliefs. http://lizwroth.wordpress.com/2010/05/13/jaime-bien-les-surrealists/

Definition of Surrealism according to Breton: SURREALISM, n. Pure psychic automatism, by which we propose to express, verbally, in writing, or by any other means, the real process of thought. Thought dictated in the absence of all control exerted by reason, and outside all aesthetic or moral preoccupations. http://andrebreton.org/photogallery.html

The Definition of Surrealism In French, Surrealism means ‘above realism’ or ‘beyond reality’ – in other words, ‘more than real’. http://www.mattesonart.com/paris-the-heart-of-surrealism-1924.aspx

Techniques of the Surrealists The Surrealist artists adopted various techniques to unlock the unconscious mind, casting aside traditional methods of creating art and challenging usual ways of production. E.g. Exquisite Corpse http://www.tcf.ua.edu/Classes/Jbutler/T340/SurrealismLecture.htm

Surrealism -- Two Directions Group 1: Veristic Surrealism Max Ernst, Salvador Dali & Rene Magritte painted dream-like images – technically skilful, their works are often illogical. - Dali called his pictures ‘hand-painted dream photographs’ http://kemperartmuseum.wustl.edu/collection/explore/artwork/541 The Eye of Silence by Max Ernst 1943-44

Surrealism -- Two Directions Group 2: Automatism Automatism – the Surrealist term for Freud’s technique of free association, which he used to reveal the unconscious minds of his patients. Joan Miro and Andre Masson were amongst this group, which worked instinctively: not thinking about what was being created, but letting the unconscious take over. Any material could be used and the resulting colours and shapes should express underlying feelings and emotions. Harlequin’s Carnival by Joan Miro 1924-5 Card Trick by Andre Masson 1923

Belgian painter, one of the leading Surrealists RENE MAGRITTE 1898 -- 1967 Belgian painter, one of the leading Surrealists Painted illogical images with startling clarity. ~ Magritte’s style: - Placed everyday objects in absurd settings - Juxtaposed familiar sights in unnatural contexts - The challenging images in Magritte's works stem from revelations of the mystery of the visible world. "My painting is visible images which conceal nothing; It does not mean anything, because mystery means nothing either, it is unknowable" - said Rene Magritte. Ren� Fran腔is Ghislain Magritte was born on 21 November 1898 in Lessines, Belgium.Painting had always seemed "vaguely magical" to him. Magritte studied at the Acad士ie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels for two years until 1918.In 1922 Magritte got married with Georgette Berger, whom he had met at the age of fifteen and met again at in 1920. Magritte was inspired by Georgette and she became his model.Magritte produced his first surrealist painting, Le jockey perdu in 1926, and held his first exhibition in Brussels in 1927.Magritte's simplicity is misleading. Magritte chose ordinary things from which to construct his works - trees, chairs, tables, doors, windows, shoes, shelves, landscapes, people.Magritte's work frequently contains a juxtaposition of objects or an unusual context giving new meanings to familiar things.Magritte shared the Surrealist concept of the power of desire and eroticism and wanted to translate this idea through unconventional images.Magritte's work was shown in the United States in New York in 1936.In 1965 a large retrospectives of Magritte's work was held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1992, a manifestation of his worldwide recognition.

Magritte: * Painted things as they look to us, but in situations where neither they nor we could occur and then added titles which accompany them in the way that names correspond to objects without either illustrating or explaining them. Personal Values Golconde

The Difficult Crossing 1926 Rene Magritte The Difficult Crossing 1926 What do you see? What do you think about that? What does it make you wonder?

Rene Magritte The Reckless Sleeper 1927 What do you see? What do you think about that? What does it make you wonder?

What do you think about that? What does it make you wonder? Rene Magritte The Red Model 1934 What do you see? What do you think about that? What does it make you wonder?

Rene Magritte Time Transfixed 1938 What do you see? What do you think about that? What does it make you wonder?

Rene Magritte Homesickness 1940 What do you see? What do you think about that? What does it make you wonder?

Rene Magritte Personal Values 1952 What do you see? What do you think about that? What does it make you wonder?

What do you think about that? What does it make you wonder? Rene Magritte Signature in Blank 1965 What do you see? What do you think about that? What does it make you wonder? http://www.bsu.edu/classes/prince/eng102/magritte.htm

Rene Magritte The False Eye 1928 http://www.learner.org/courses/globalart/work/102/index.html

Rene Magritte Treason of images (This is not a pipe) 1929

Treason of images (This is not a pipe) 1929 On a oil painting, wrote in large letters “this is not a pipe”, which, of course, it isn’t. It is a picture of a pipe, but as a picture, an image, its reality is different from a pipe’s.

Rene Magritte The Human Condition 1934

* A canvas stands on an easel in front of a view through a window. - Canvas has a picture of what we assume to be the view. * Illustrates the contradiction between three-dimensional space which objects actually occupy and the two-dimensional plane of the canvas used to represent them. * Pun in the painting: Since Renaissance, pictures had been purported to be ‘windows’ opening on to reality. ~ Easel and canvas are realistically painted. ~ Intensifies the question: is the landscape real or painted? The Human Condition 1934

The Human Condition 1934 * On the aims of this painting: “I placed in front of a window a painting representing exactly that part of the landscape hidden from view by the painting. So the tree in the painting obscured the tree behind it outside. It existed for the spectator simultaneously in his mind and outside in the real landscape. This is how we see the world -- as being outside ourselves, even though it is only a mental picture of what we experience inside ourselves.” - Magritte

Rene Magritte The Human Condition 1935

Rene Magritte The Son of Man 1964 Magritte said that the painting just shows us about humanity. He says that everything we see hides some other thing yet we still want to see what is hidden by what we see. There is always some sort of interest in what is hidden and what the visible does not show us. This brings about some sort of conflict between the visible that is present and the visible that is hidden.

* Eliminated conventional expectations Some ways which Magritte used to give the ‘shocking’ quality in his works? * Eliminated conventional expectations 1. Exploit astonishing discrepancies of scale. 2. Deny the law of gravity. 3. Endow an item with a different material /substance that in reality is not associated with the original

~ Aim: To project the world of dreams as convincingly as possible. SALVADOR DALi 1904 -- 1989 - Spanish painter. ~ Aim: To project the world of dreams as convincingly as possible. - From childhood, he was subjected to hallucinations & acts of sudden & uncontrollable violence.

* Important works created between 1929 to 1939. * 1929: Joined the Surrealists. * Important works created between 1929 to 1939. - Developed his ‘paranoiac-critical’ method. ~ Proposed ‘a paranoiac and active advance of mind’ which would release from the unconscious, images of force and power that they in turn would react upon it, thereby affecting the deepest sources of individual & social action. The Invisible Man 1929-31

The Persistence of Memory Salvador Dali The Persistence of Memory 1931 24 cm x 33 cm http://momawas.moma.org/collection/depts/paint_sculpt/blowups/paint_sculpt_016.html

The Metamorphosis of Narcissus http://www.verotika.org/dali1.html The Metamorphosis of Narcissus 1937 51 cm x 76 cm

Soft Construction with Boiled Beans: Premonition of Civil War 1936 http://www.nowsurrealgalleries.co.uk/view_pic.php3?pid=576&aid=44

Cannibalism in Autumn 1936 http://www.duke.edu/web/lit132/dali_art.html

Sleep 1937 http://users3.ev1.net/~rooftopyawp/dalisleep.html

~ The surprise effect of Dali’s work depends on his presentation of incongruities in a meticulous, miniature-like technique. - Dali’s paintings were a direct transcription of things envisioned in a dream-like or trance-like state. Time Transfixed 1938 http://www.artic.edu/artaccess/AA_Modern/pages/MOD_6.shtml#