Category

Surrealist

An artistic philosophy that took hold in 1920s Paris, affirming the supremacy of the “disinterested play of thought” and the “omnipotence of dreams” rather than reason and logic.

Showing 1-8 of 8 results
  • Glossary Terms

    Surrealism is an artistic philosophy that took hold in 1920s Paris and spread throughout the world in the decades that followed. André Breton outlined his idea of its aims in his Surrealist Manifesto (1924), affirming the supremacy of the “disinterested play of thought” and the “omnipotence of dreams” rather than reason and logic. Early surrealists were inspired by Freudian psychoanalysis and its emphasis on the power of unconscious thought. Through automatic writing and hypnosis, surrealists believed they could free their imaginations to reveal deeper truths. The French poets Charles Baudelaire, Arthur Rimbaud, Valentine Penrose, and Guillaume Apollinaire embodied early surrealist principles. 

    Some contemporaries of the surrealists who did not ascribe to Breton’s manifesto or were not a part of his circle employed similar practices. Surrealist practices were used in the visual arts, particularly in the paintings of Frida Kahlo, Salvador Dalí, Leonora Carrington, and René Magritte, and in the films of Jean Cocteau and Germaine Dulac. A second generation of surrealist writers emerged in other parts of the world, especially in Latin America; see the poems of Joyce MansourAlejandra Pizarnik, and Octavio Paz. The surrealist aesthetic has influenced modern and contemporary poets writing in English as well, including Dorothea Tanning, James Tate, John Ashbery, and Michael Palmer.

  • Author
    Joyce Mansour was an Egyptian-French author and part of the inner circle of postwar surrealists. She wrote 16 books of poetry as well as prose works and plays. Mansour was born in Bowden, England, to Jewish...
  • Author
    Tristan Tzara was born in 1896, in Moineşti, Romania. He is best remembered as a cofounder and theoretician of Dadaism, an intellectual movement of the World War I era whose adherents espoused intentional ...
  • Author
    Poet and journalist Robert Desnos was born in Paris, France. The son of a successful café owner, Desnos rebelled against his father’s plans for a bourgeois education and pursued literature, idolizing authors...
  • Author
    Jean Cocteau had a wide-ranging career as a poet, dramatist, screenwriter, and novelist. “Cocteau’s willingness and ability to turn his hand to the most disparate creative ventures,” James P. Mc Nab wrote ...
  • Author
    André Breton was born in 1896 to a family of shopkeepers in Tinchebray, a small town in Normandy, France. He studied medicine and psychiatry, displaying a special interest in mental illness. Though he never...
  • Author
    Antonin Artaud, considered among the most influential figures in the evolution of modern drama theory, was born in Marseilles, France, and he studied at the Collège du Sacré-Cœur. He moved to Paris, where ...
  • Author
    Guillaume Apollinaire is considered one of the most important literary figures of the early twentieth century. His brief career influenced the development of such artistic movements as Futurism, Cubism, Dadaism...
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