SURREALISM
The Surrealist movement was founded in Paris by a small group of writers and artists who sought to channel the unconscious as a means to unlock the power of the imagination. Disdaining rationalism and literary realism, and powerfully influenced by Sigmund Freud, the Surrealists believed the conscious mind repressed the power of the imagination, weighting it down with taboos. Influenced also by Karl Marx, they hoped that the psyche had the power to reveal the contradictions in the everyday world and spur on revolution. Their emphasis on the power of the imagination puts them in the tradition of Romanticism, but unlike their forbears, they believed that revelations could be found on the street and in everyday life. The Surrealist impulse to tap the subconscious mind, and their interests in myth and primitivism, went on to shape the Abstract Expressionists, and they remain influential today.
Salvador DALI
Spanish painter, sculptor, graphic artist, and
designer. After passing through phases of Cubism, Futurism and Metaphysical
painting, he joined the Surrealists in 1929 and his talent for self-publicity
rapidly made him the most famous representative of the movement. Throughout his
life he cultivated eccentricity and exhibitionism (one of his most famous acts
was appearing in a diving suit at the opening of the London Surrealist
exhibition in 1936), claiming that this was the source of his creative energy.
He took over the Surrealist theory of automatism but transformed it into a more
positive method which he named `critical paranoia'. According to this theory one
should cultivate genuine delusion as in clinical paranoia while remaining
residually aware at the back of one's mind that the control of the reason and
will has been deliberately suspended. He claimed that this method should be used
not only in artistic and poetical creation but also in the affairs of daily
life. His paintings employed a meticulous academic technique that was
contradicted by the unreal `dream' space he depicted and by the strangely
hallucinatory characters of his imagery. He described his pictures as
`hand-painted dream photographs' and had certain favorite and recurring images,
such as the human figure with half-open drawers protruding from it, burning
giraffes, and watches bent and flowing as if made from melting wax (The
Persistence of Memory, MOMA, New York; 1931).
In 1937 Dalí
visited Italy and adopted a more traditional style; this together with his
political views (he was a supporter of General Franco) led Breton to expel him
from the Surrealist ranks. He moved to the USA in 1940 and remained there until
1955. During this time he devoted himself largely to self-publicity; his
paintings were often on religious themes (The Crucifixion of St John of the
Cross, Glasgow Art Gallery, 1951), although sexual subjects and pictures
centring on his wife Gala were also continuing preoccupations. In 1955 he
returned to Spain and in old age became a recluse.
Apart from
painting, Dalí's output included sculpture, book illustration, jewellery design,
and work for the theatre. In collaboration with the director Luis Buñuel he also
made the first Surrealist films---Un chien andalou (1929) and L'Age d'or
(1930)---and he contributed a dream sequence to Alfred Hitchcock's
Spellbound (1945). He also wrote a novel, Hidden Faces (1944) and several
volumes of flamboyant autobiography. Although he is undoubtedly one of the most
famous artists of the 20th century, his status is controversial; many critics
consider that he did little if anything of consequence after his classic
Surrealist works of the 1930s. There are museums devoted to Dalí's work in
Figueras, his home town in Spain, and in St Petersburg in
Florida.
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