"Surrealist" Essays and Research Papers

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    How Did Salvador’s Art Become so Popular? Salvador’s art has influenced many people and artist till this day. With his amazing surrealist kinds of art depicting the things of the real world but in a different perspective. It all started with the birth of Salvador Dali of May 11‚ 1904. He had two siblings‚ Salvador was his 9 month older brother‚ but he soon died before Dali was born. His parents like to say to Salvador that he was his brothers reincarnation. The second sibling Salvador had was his

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    In his long-lasting career that blossomed from the late 1930’s to the 1960’s‚ Gleeson wrote the first text in Australia that defined the meaning of Surrealism‚ and was known as Australia’s leading Surrealist artist.. While working within a subjective context‚ influenced by Salvador Dali‚ Gleeson’s overriding concept behind his work is that ‘humanity is driven by the subconscious mind’. Gleeson preferred to work in artificial light and avoided working

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    Portraiture Case Study

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    Portraiture Case Study “Some of the most fascinating portraits are those that offer the viewer an emotional or psychological insight into their subject” Compare and contrast the work of THREE artists who have explored the genre of portraiture. A portrait is typically defined as a representation of a specific individual‚ such as the artist might meet in life. “It could be drawn‚ painted‚ sculpted or photographed. A portrait is usually a statement‚ made firstly by the sitter‚ who wishes to be seen

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    Elapsed Time

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    The Persistence of Memory Salvador Dali was a surrealist painter born in 1904 in Figueras‚ Catalonia‚ a major region of Spain. Dali became great at adopting the various styles of other artists into his repertoire and studied all over the country (The 1). He became fond of the link between the subconscious-mind and art. He envisioned himself painting his dreams in sometimes erotic forms. Known mainly for his surreal work he was fascinated with ideals and concepts of psychology.

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    Life Part I

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    mirror society and show it what was wrong with it. For example‚ Dali was not friendly with the aristocrats of his time‚ in fact he hated them. So one of his surrealist paintings showed an aristocrat with no face. This was supposed to symbolize that aristocrats did not listen to anyone. It was also during Dali’s surrealist period when he expressed many of his sexual ideas in his works. Some examples of these types of works would be The Apparatus and The Great Masturbater

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    Un Chien Andalou

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    carried out with the use of dream imagery‚ symbols‚ puns‚ and with a general attitude of complete freedom of expression. The surrealists were concerned with liberating the imagination from its rational and scientific chains by making use of dreams and fantasy (41). Bunuel‚ himself‚ in his Notes on the Making of Un Chien Andalou‚ has the following to say about the surrealist movement and its relation to his film: Un Chien Andalou would not have existed if

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    The Early Life of Salvador Dali Salvador Dali had a dream that turned into inspiration to create The Persistence of Memory‚ now a world known master piece. Dali was born in Spain in 1904‚ and named Salvador after his brother who had died just nine months earlier at the age of three. At the age of five‚ Dali’s parents took him to his brother’s grave‚ where they told him he was simply his brother reincarnated. Dali also visit the grave and placed flowers on it‚ all while looking at the tombstone

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    juxtaposition. Dali is considered one of the most important artists of the surrealist movement. For fourteen years Dali employed all the common features of surrealism; many of his paintings also include the techniques of impressionism‚ cubism‚ futurism and classicism as seen in ’Geopoliticus Child Watching the Birth of the new Man’. AUDIENCE There would’ve been a varying audience for this artwork; patrons of surrealist pieces‚ political audiences of the world war and historians. In this artwork

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    artists migrated to America‚ enlarging the scene and diminishing Paris as the center. America was beginning its dominance of the art world with the emergence of the Abstract Expressionists.” The American artists became not the minority as other surrealist treated them but a major factor in the movement and what it stood for‚ with them in the spotlight the movement became something that it’s leader would have never

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    Art-Cubism

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    Cubism Cubism is an early-20th-century avant-garde art movement pioneered by Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso‚ and later joined by Juan Gris‚ Jean Metzinger‚ Albert Gleizes‚ Robert Delaunay‚ Henri Le Fauconnier‚ and Fernand Léger‚[1] that revolutionized European painting and sculpture‚ and inspired related movements in music‚ literature and architecture. Cubism has been considered the most influential art movement of the 20th century. The term is broadly used in association with a wide variety of

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