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  1. Surrealism is a movement in art. (Web site)

     

  2. Surrealism is a movement in art and literature. (Web site)

     

  3. Surrealism is an art movement which began in France during the 1920s and 1930s. (Web site)

     

  4. Surrealism: a modern movement in the arts, trying to depict the workings of the unconscious mind. (Web site)

     

  5. Surrealism - a successor to Dadaism, the style or movement starting in the 1920's which was influenced by Freud's focus on dreams. (Web site)

     

  6. Surrealism is a philosophy, a cultural and artistic movement, and a term used to describe unexpected juxtapositions. (Web site)

     

  7. Surrealism is a movement that developed from Dada in 1924. Some specialists say that Surrealism was already founded in Dada, but it has a different name. (Web site)

     

  8. Surrealism was based upon dreams, the irrational and the fantastic and began in the 1920's. (Web site)

     

  9. Surrealism was an artistic and literary movement that reached its heights in the 1920s and 1930s. (Web site)

     

  10. Surrealism was connected with the theories of Sigmund Freud and with primitivism more generally. (Web site)
     

     

BRETON

 

 

  1. André Breton began the movement with his Manifesto of Surrealism. (Web site)

     

  2. Art historian, Sarane Alexandrian, (1970) stated that the death of Andre Breton in 1966 marked the end of surrealism as an organized movement. (Web site)
     

     

SURREALISM

 

 

  1. Ithell Colquhoun in The Mantic Stain, Surrealism and Automatism describes for us these techniques: decalomania, fumage, parsemage and écrémage. (Web site)

     

  2. An integral movement in the Modern period, surrealism proceeded to inspire a new generation seeking to expand the vocabulary of art. (Web site)

     

  3. Surrealism continued to expand in public visibility, in Breton's own estimation the high water mark was the 1936 London International Surrealist Exhibition. (Web site)
     

     

WORLD WAR

 

 

  1. The artistic style of surrealism began as an official movement shortly after the end of the first world war. (Web site)

     

  2. Surrealism during World War II The rise of Adolf Hitler and the events of 1939 through 1945 in Europe, for a time overshadowed almost all else.
     

     

SURREALIST

 

 

  1. The error that is at the root of surrealism is the idea of the infinite richness of the unconscious imagination. (Web site)

     

  2. In the 1920s several composers were influenced by surrealism, or by individuals in the surrealist movement. (Web site)

     

  3. Pulp Surrealism presents four case studies, each exploring the out-of the-way and impertinent elements which inspired the surrealists. (Web site)

     

  4. Other figures in the surrealist movement were expelled, for example Roberto Matta, but by their own description, remained close to surrealism. (Web site)
     

     

AIM

 

 

  1. As Breton proclaimed, the true aim of Surrealism is "long live the social revolution, and it alone!". (Web site)

     

  2. To further the revolutionary aim of Surrealism, in 1927 Breton and others joined the Communist Party.
     

     

MOVEMENT

 

 

  1. Surrealism, like dada, began primarily as a literary movement. (Web site)

     

  2. It is the end result of several art movements starting with surrealism. (Web site)

     

  3. Surrealism certainly can claim credit to being the most intellectually provocative artistic movement of the twentieth century. (Web site)

     

  4. A concise description of the 20th century visual arts and literary movement Surrealism at Biddington's Pedigree & Provenance. (Web site)
     

     

IMPORTANT JOINING

 

 

  1. Surrealism, movement in literature and the fine arts, founded by the French poet and critic Andre Breton. (Web site)

     

  2. Giorgio de Chirico was one of the important joining figures between the philosophical and visual aspects of surrealism. (Web site)
     

     

DADAISM

 

 

  1. Post-impressionism, symbolism, fauvism, expressionism, cubism, futurism and surrealism are some of the movements to be considered. (Web site)

     

  2. A few different forms are surrealism, Dadaism, Imagism, Romanticism, and many others. (Web site)

     

  3. This attempt begins with Suprematism and continues through movements that are parallel to Cubism and its offspring (Dadaism and Surrealism). (Web site)

     

  4. The movement influenced later styles, movements and groups including surrealism, Pop Art and Fluxus. (Web site)
     

     

OFTEN CONSIDERED

 

 

  1. For example, Czech Surrealism Group in Prague, though driven underground in 1968, re-emerged in the 1990s. (Web site)

     

  2. As for the invisibility' of Belgian surrealism in Paris , it was especially Mesens and Magritte who featured. (Web site)

     

  3. In literature, surrealism was confined almost exclusively to France, and was based on the associations and implications of words. (Web site)

     

  4. In general usage, the term Surrealism is more often considered a movement in visual arts than the original cultural and philosophical movement. (Web site)

     

  5. Often considered exclusively French, surrealism was in fact international from the beginning, with both the Belgian and Czech groups developing early. (Web site)
     

     

DADA

 

 

  1. The Paris Dada movement later evolved into Surrealism by 1924. (Web site)

     

  2. The Dadaist movement was never very stable and eventually melded into surrealism by 1924. (Web site)

     

  3. The original Dada movement lasted only about a decade, after which it was superseded by surrealism in the mid 20s. (Web site)

     

  4. Centre promotes research excellence in studies of dada and surrealism and their impact on modern thought and culture. (Web site)

     

  5. Along with Russian constructivism and surrealism, Dada stands as one of the three most significant movements of the historical avant-garde. (Web site)
     

     

ASSOCIATED

 

 

  1. While Surrealism is typically associated with the arts, it has been said to transcend them. (Web site)

     

  2. Surrealism often defines literary works associated with the early twentieth century. (Web site)
     

     

SURREALIST ART

 

 

  1. Surrealism in television Some have found the television series The Prisoner to be of Surrealist interest.

     

  2. Surrealism and Imagination : Links to international surrealist groups and surrealism related web sites.

     

  3. Surrealist Art Links : Links to surrealism related web sites (visual artists, literature, film, and related movements).

     

  4. The Vienna School initially identified itself with surrealism. (Web site)

     

  5. Surrealism remains enormously popular with museum patrons; the Tate Modern in 2001 held an exhibition of surrealist art that attracted over 170,000 visitors. (Web site)
     

     

PARIS

 

 

  1. The exhibition, titled Surrealism Unlimited was in Paris, and attracted international attention.

     

  2. Surrealism also attracted writers from the United Kingdom to Paris, David Gascoyne among them. (Web site)
     

     

SURREALISM MOVEMENT

 

 

  1. A Surrealism combined with realism. (Web site)

     

  2. Games, such as the exquisite corpse, assumed importance in surrealism. (Web site)

     

  3. Keith Wigdor is the leader of International Surrealism in 2006.  surrealismnow.com

     

  4. Surrealism in comedy Main article: Surreal humour. (Web site)

     

  5. In a sense, surrealism manifests the same psychic energies as our dreams. (Web site)

     

  6. Far from being negative, surrealism focused on positive expression. (Web site)

     

  7. There have even been some manifestations of surrealism in Russia and China. (Web site)

     

  8. Salvador Dali is a well-known example of surrealism (see his modernistic Last Supper). (Web site)

     

  9. Egyptian surrealism was not particularly concerned with Breton's surrealistic manifests from the twenties. (Web site)

     

  10. Classicism, against which surrealism asserted itself, is the aesthetic counterpart of capitalism and political tyranny. (Web site)

     

  11. Hamoir made comments, she criticized and corrected Scutenaires texts and was in this way the archetypal representative of Brussels surrealism. (Web site)

     

  12. Miró's paintings, with their use of abstract and fantastic shapes and vaguely defined creatures, are typical of abstract Surrealism. (Web site)

     

  13. He dealt with the space between our conscious and subconscious mind. Surrealism 1924Surrealism is a movement grew out of Dada and automatism. (Web site)

     

  14. Historically many were not interested in political matters, and this lack of interest created rifts in the Surrealism movement.

     

  15. Movement participants sought to revolutionize life with actions intended to bring about change in accordance with Surrealism philosophy. (Web site)

     

  16. Please stop attacking me. There a countless books and sources that can back up my one word edit. Surrealism is a Revolution and always will be. (Web site)

     

  17. It was American poet Charles Henri Ford and his magazine View which offered Breton a channel for promoting surrealism in the United States. (Web site)

     

  18. Earlier, he had coined the word surrealism in the program notes for Jean Cocteau and Erik Satie's ballet Parade , first performed on 18 May 1917. (Web site)
     

     

 

 


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