Emerging in Paris around 1920, from the Dada movement of the prior decade - and in fact founded by several of the Dadaists themselves - Surrealism placed more emphasis on generating art through subconscious psychological processes, rather than by the deliberately iconoclastic methods of Dada. In both cases, a desire to shock and shake up the complacent norms of society was evident. But these strange new works of art could hardly be relied upon to point out the preferred direction for society to aim toward.
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1st issue, Dec. 1924 |
Techniques used by Surrealists include automatic writing, depictions of distorted or disassembled objects in unusual juxtapositions, blind collaboration, incorporating accidents and mistakes, using dreams and hallucinations for inspiration, and the re-appropriation of symbols and myths. An example of blind collaboration is the parlor game Exquisite Corpse, in which the drawing paper is passed around to the next artist, folded to conceal the work in progress. The point is surprise, generally yielding both incongruity and connectivity when the final product is unfolded. All of these techniques are meant to restrain the conscious mind from meddling too much in the creative process, in order to produce art that could serve equally well as a Rorschach test - with its ambiguities revealing more about the psychology of the viewer than they do about the artist.
Some of the better known Surrealists include: Max Ernst, Yves Tanguy, Paul Éluard, Salvador Dali, André Breton, Antonin Artaud, Joan Miró, Luis Buñuel, Man Ray, Hans Arp, Tristan Tzara, Erik Satie, and (peripherally) Pablo Picasso. It was largely a boy's club. But there were indeed some female Surrealists, such as Méret Oppenheim and Gala Éluard.
Wikipedia article: Surrealism