Dadaism and Surrealism
"It is not the fear of madness which will oblige us to leave the flag of imagination furled." ~ Andre Breton, "Manifesto of Surrealism"
The world of art is always influenced by the historical moment in which the movement originated. The concepts of Dadaism and surrealism were the direct product of artists witnessing the atrocities of the First World War which would become even more unpalatable during the events of the Second World War (Hoffman 2-3). The visual presentation of both movements can be initially jarring. Dadaism has been described as "anti-art." Instead of beautiful icons of religious scenes or young women, the paintings of this movement are often images of war and violence painted in harsh colors to illustrate the harshness of the world around the artist . Surrealism is by the very definition of surreal, something beyond what the normal person can understand (Claybourne 4). Jose Pierre, one of the Surrealist artists, said, "The Surrealists found it grotesque to die for any flag whatsoever, even if its colors were harmoniously composed" (Horsley 1). To respond to the violence, the Surrealists took components of what people know to exist in reality and then twists them into a dreamscape caught on the canvas, or whatever media the artist is working. Both Dadaist and eventual Surrealist Max Ernst and Surrealist extraordinaire Salvador Dali utilize the artistic movement to create lasting icons that exemplify their movement and to force a discussion about what is art and what visuals can be accepted in this category.
Max Ernst was a founding member of Dadaism and would also go on to contribute greatly to the founding of the Surrealist movement as the tenor of the world changed (Warlick 62). The first painting of Ernst to be labeled as Surrealist is the work Aquis Submersus. The painting is on first look, a person swimming at nightfall. However, the visual icon of the clay figure in the front is what draws secondary attention. The swimmer is in green water which is obviously unclean and unhealthy. The perfectly square buildings and storage facilities surrounding the pool create the impression that the swimmer is surrounded. There is a cube of sorts on the furthest edge of the pool. It appears to be floating at least in part over the pool's surface. The shadows of the clay figure and some unseen thin rectangle stretch towards the swimmer. Everything that surrounds the pool serves to create in the swimmer a sense of claustrophobia and a feeling of danger to the viewer. The swimmer herself, the gender is indicated by the curvature of the hips, is of particular importance as well. She is face down in the water and has been under the water for eternity. Not only is the world around attacking, but the woman is also attacking herself. Many of Ernst's works is designed to be provocative and illicit an emotional response from the viewer (Klingsohr-Leroy 10).
Surrealism is a form of art which attempts to recreate the human mind, the unreality of the dreamscape in the real world. According to Andre Breton, in the "Manifesto of Surrealism," the surrealist painting is an endeavor to recapture the frustration and bewilderment of the dream in a realistic setting. He says:
What I most enjoy contemplating about a dream is everything that sinks below the surface in a waking state, everything I have forgotten about my activities in the course of the preceding day, dark foliage, stupid branches. In "reality," likewise, I prefer to fall…I would like to sleep, in order to surrender myself to the dreamers, the way I surrender myself to those who read me with eyes wide open; in order to stop imposing, in this realm, the conscious rhythm of my thought (Breton).
This then is the stated purpose of the Surrealist movement, the intention of creating imagery based upon the...
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