Dictionary Definition
surrealism n : a 20th century movement of artists
and writers (developing out of Dadaism) who used fantastic images
and incongruous juxtapositions in order to represent unconscious
thoughts and dreams
User Contributed Dictionary
Hyphenation
- sur·re·al·ism
Noun
surrealism- An artistic movement and an aesthetic philosophy that aims for the liberation of the mind by emphasizing the critical and imaginative powers of the subconscious.
Related terms
Translations
artistic movement and aesthetic philosophy
- Bulgarian: Сюрреализъм (syurrealis'm)
- Chinese: 超现实主义 ()
- Croatian: nadrealizam
- Czech: surrealismus
- Danish: surrealismen
- Dutch: surealisme
- Esperanto: superrealismo
- Estonian: sürrealism
- French: surréalisme
- German: Surrealismus
- Greek: υπερρεαλισμός (yperrealismós), σουρεαλισμός (sourealismós)
- Hebrew: סוריאליזם (real'is)
- Japanese: シュルレアリスム (saaruriarisumu or sāruriarisumu)
- Korean: sarialismu?
- Portuguese: surrealismo
- Romanian: suprarealism
- Swedish: surrealism
- Turkish: sürrealizm
Extensive Definition
Surrealism is a cultural movement that began in
the early-1920s, and is best known for the visual artworks and
writings of the group members. The works feature the element of
surprise, unexpected juxtapositions and non
sequitur; however many Surrealist artists and writers regard
their work as an expression of the philosophical movement first and
foremost with the works being an artifact, and leader André
Breton was explicit in his assertion that Surrealism was above
all a revolutionary movement. From the Dada activities of
World
War I Surrealism was formed with the most important center of
the movement in Paris. From the 1920s on it spread around the
globe, eventually affecting the visual arts, literature, film,
music, and video games of many countries and languages, as well as
political thought and practice and philosophy and social
theory.
Founding of the movement
World War I scattered the writers and artists who had been based in Paris, and while away from Paris many involved themselves in the Dada movement, believing that excessive rational thought and bourgeois values had brought the terrifying conflict upon the world. The Dadaists protested with anti-rational anti-art gatherings, performances, writing and art works. After the war when they returned to Paris the Dada activities continued.During the war Surrealism's soon-to-be leader
André
Breton, who had trained in medicine and psychiatry, served in a
neurological hospital where he used the psychoanalytic methods of
Sigmund
Freud with soldiers who were shell-shocked.
He also met the young writer Jacques
Vaché and felt that he was the spiritual son of writer and
'pataphysician
Alfred
Jarry, and he came to admire the young writer's anti-social
attitude and disdain for established artistic tradition. Later
Breton wrote, "In literature, I am successively taken with Rimbaud,
with Jarry, with Apollinaire,
with Nouveau,
with Lautréamont,
but it is Jacques Vaché to whom I owe the most."
Back in Paris, Breton joined in the Dada
activities and also started the literary journal Littérature along
with Louis Aragon
and Philippe
Soupault. They began experimenting with automatic
writing—spontaneously writing without censoring their
thoughts—and published the "automatic" writings, as well as
accounts of dreams, in Littérature. Breton and Soupault delved
deeper into automatism and wrote
The Magnetic Fields (Les Champs Magnétiques) in 1919. They
continued the automatic writing, gathering more artists and writers
into the group, and coming to believe that automatism was a better
tactic for societal change than the Dada attack on prevailing
values. In addition to Breton, Aragon and Soupault the original
Surrealists included Paul
Éluard, Benjamin
Péret, René
Crevel, Robert
Desnos, Jacques
Baron, Max Morise,
Marcel
Noll, Pierre
Naville, Roger
Vitrac, Simone
Breton, Gala
Éluard, Max Ernst,
Man Ray,
Hans
Arp, Georges
Malkine, Michel
Leiris, Georges
Limbour, Antonin
Artaud, Raymond
Queneau, André
Masson, Joan Miró,
Marcel
Duchamp, Jacques
Prévert and Yves Tanguy.
As they developed their philosophy they felt that while Dada
rejected categories and labels, Surrealism would advocate the idea
that ordinary and depictive expressions are vital and important,
but that the sense of their arrangement must be open to the full
range of imagination according to the Hegelian
Dialectic. They also looked to the Marxist dialectic
and the work of such theorists as Walter
Benjamin and Herbert
Marcuse.
Freud's
work with free association, dream analysis and the hidden
unconscious was of the utmost importance to the Surrealists in
developing methods to liberate imagination. However, they embraced
idiosyncrasy, while
rejecting the idea of an underlying madness or darkness of the
mind. (Later the idiosyncratic Salvador
Dalí explained it as: "There is only one difference between a
madman and me. I am not mad.")
The group aimed to revolutionize human
experience, including its personal, cultural, social, and political
aspects, by freeing people from what they saw as false rationality,
and restrictive customs and structures. Breton
proclaimed, the true aim of Surrealism is "long live the social
revolution, and it alone!" To this goal, at various times
surrealists aligned with communism and anarchism.
In 1924 they declared their intents and
philosophy with the issuance of the first Surrealist
Manifesto. That same year they established the
Bureau of Surrealist Research, and began publishing the journal
La Révolution surréaliste.
Surrealist Manifesto
Breton wrote the manifesto of 1924 (another was issued in 1929) that defines the purposes of the group and includes citations of the influences on Surrealism, examples of Surrealist works and discussion of Surrealist automatism. He defined Surrealism as:La Révolution surréaliste
Shortly after releasing the first Surrealist Manifesto in 1924, the Surrealists published the inaugural issue of La Révolution surréaliste and publication continued into 1929. Pierre Naville and Benjamin Péret were the initial directors of the publication and modeled the format of the journal on the conservative scientific review La Nature. The format was deceiving, and to the Surrealists' delight La Révolution surréaliste was consistently scandalous and revolutionary. The journal focused on writing with most pages densely packed with columns of text, but also included reproductions of art, among them works by Giorgio de Chirico, Max Ernst, André Masson and Man Ray.Bureau of Surrealist Research
The Bureau of Surrealist Research (Centrale Surréaliste) was the Paris office where the Surrealist writers and artists gathered to meet, hold discussions, and conduct interviews with the goal of investigating speech under trance.Expansion
The movement in the mid-1920s was characterized by meetings in cafes where the Surrealists played collaborative drawing games and discussed the theories of Surrealism. The Surrealists developed techniques such as automatic drawing. (See Surrealist techniques and games.)Breton initially doubted that visual arts could
even be useful in the Surrealist movement since they appeared to be
less malleable and open to chance and automatism.
This caution was overcome by the discovery of such techniques
as frottage,
and decalcomania.
Soon more visual artists joined Surrealism
including Giorgio
de Chirico, Salvador
Dalí, Enrico
Donati, Alberto
Giacometti, Valentine
Hugo, Méret
Oppenheim, Toyen, Grégoire
Michonze, and Luis
Buñuel. Though Breton admired Pablo
Picasso and Marcel
Duchamp and courted them to join the movement, they remained
peripheral.
More writers also joined, including former Dada
leader Tristan
Tzara, René Char,
Georges
Sadoul, André
Thirion and Maurice
Heine.
In 1925 an autonomous Surrealist group formed in
Brussels becoming official in 1926. The group included the
musician, poet and artist E.L.T.
Mesens, painter and writer René
Magritte, Paul
Nougé, Marcel
Lecomte, Camille
Goemans, and André
Souris. In 1927 they were joined by the writer Louis
Scutenaire. They corresponded regularly with the Paris group,
and in 1927 both Goemans and Magritte moved to Paris and frequented
Breton’s circle. with The Kiss (Le Baiser) from 1927 by Ernst. The
first is generally held to have a distance, and erotic subtext,
whereas the second presents an erotic act openly and directly. In
the second the influence of Miró and
the drawing style of Picasso is
visible with the use of fluid curving and intersecting lines and
colour, where as the first takes a directness that would later be
influential in movements such as Pop art. Giorgio
de Chirico, and his previous development of Metaphysical
art, was one of the important joining figures between the
philosophical and visual aspects of Surrealism. Between 1911 and
1917, he adopted an unornamented depictional style whose surface
would be adopted by others later. The Red Tower (La tour rouge)
from 1913 shows the stark colour contrasts and illustrative style
later adopted by Surrealist painters. His 1914 The Nostalgia of the
Poet (La Nostalgie du poete) has the figure turned away from the
viewer, and the juxtaposition of a bust with glasses and a fish as
a relief defies conventional explanation. He was also a writer, and
his novel Hebdomeros
presents a series of dreamscapes with an unusual use of
punctuation, syntax and grammar designed to create a particular
atmosphere and frame around its images. His images, including set
designs for the Ballets
Russes, would create a decorative form of visual Surrealism,
and he would be an influence on the two artists who would be even
more closely associated with Surrealism in the public mind:
Salvador
Dalí and Magritte.
He would, however, leave the Surrealist group in 1928.
In 1924, Miro and
Masson
applied Surrealism theory to painting explicitly leading to the La
Peinture Surrealiste exhibition.
Breton published Surrealism and Painting in 1928
which summarized the movement to that point, though he continued to
update the work until the 1960s.
Major exhibitions in the 1920s
- 1925 - La Peinture Surrealiste - The first ever Surrealist exhibition at Gallerie Pierre in Paris. Displayed works by Masson, Man Ray, Klee, Miró, and others. The show confirmed that Surrealism had a component in the visual arts (though it had been initially debated whether this was possible), techniques from Dada, such as photomontage were used.
- Galerie Surréaliste opened on March 26, 1926 with an exhibition by Man Ray.
Writing continues
The first Surrealist work, according to leader Breton, was Magnetic Fields (Les Champs Magnétiques) (May–June 1919). Littérature contained automatist works and accounts of dreams. The magazine and the portfolio both showed their disdain for literal meanings given to objects and focused rather on the undertones, the poetic undercurrents present. Not only did they give emphasis to the poetic undercurrents, but also to the connotations and the overtones which "exist in ambiguous relationships to the visual images."Because Surrealist writers seldom, if ever,
appear to organize their thoughts and the images they present, some
people find much of their work difficult to parse. This notion
however is a superficial comprehension, prompted no doubt by
Breton's initial emphasis on automatic writing as the main route
toward a higher reality. But — as in Breton's case itself — much of
what is presented as purely automatic is actually edited and very
"thought out". Breton himself later admitted that automatic
writing's centrality had been overstated, and other elements were
introduced, especially as the growing involvement of visual artists
in the movement forced the issue, since automatic painting required
a rather more strenuous set of approaches. Thus such elements as
collage were introduced, arising partly from an ideal of startling
juxtapositions as revealed in Pierre
Reverdy's poetry. And — as in Magritte's
case (where there is no obvious recourse to either automatic
techniques or collage) the very notion of convulsive joining became
a tool for revelation in and of itself. Surrealism was meant to be
always in flux — to be more modern than modern — and so it was
natural there should be a rapid shuffling of the philosophy as new
challenges arose.
Surrealists revived interest in Isidore
Ducasse, known by his pseudonym "Le Comte de Lautréamont" and
for the line "beautiful as the chance meeting on a dissecting table
of a sewing machine and an umbrella", and Arthur
Rimbaud, two late 19th century writers believed to be the
precursors of Surrealism.
Examples of Surrealist literature are Crevel's
Mr. Knife Miss Fork (1931), Aragon's
Irene's Cunt (1927), Breton's
Sur la route de San Romano (1948), Peret's
Death to the Pigs (1929), and Artaud's
Le Pese-Nerfs (1926).
La Révolution surréaliste continued publication into 1929 with
most pages densely packed with columns of text, but also included
reproductions of art, among them works by de
Chirico, Ernst, Masson
and Man
Ray. Other works included books, poems, pamphlets, automatic
texts and theoretical tracts.
Films by Surrealists
Early films by Surrealists include:
- Entr'acte by René Clair (1924)
- La Coquille et le clergyman by Germaine Dulac, screenplay by Antonin Artaud (1928)
- Un chien andalou by Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí (1929)
- L'Étoile de mer by Man Ray (1928)
- L'Âge d'Or by Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí (1930)
- ''Le sang d'un poète by Jean Cocteau (1930)
Music by Surrealists
In the 1920s several composers were influenced by Surrealism, or by individuals in the Surrealist movement. Among them were Bohuslav Martinů, André Souris, and Edgard Varèse, who stated that his work Arcana was drawn from a dream sequence. Souris in particular was associated with the movement: he had a long relationship with Magritte, and worked on Paul Nouge's publication Adieu Marie.Germaine
Tailleferre of the French group Les Six wrote
several works which could be considered to be inspired by
Surrealism, including the 1948 Ballet Paris-Magie (scenario by
Lise
Deharme), the Operas La Petite Sirène (book by Philippe
Soupault) and Le Maître (book by Eugène Ionesco). Tailleferre also
wrote popular songs to texts by Claude Marci, the wife of Henri
Jeanson, whose portrait had been painted by Magritte in the 1930s.
Even though Breton by 1946 responded rather negatively to the
subject of music with his essay Silence is Golden, later
Surrealists have been interested in—and found parallels
to—Surrealism in the improvisation of jazz and the blues. Surrealists such as
Paul
Garon have written articles and full-length books on the
subject. Jazz and blues musicians have occasionally reciprocated
this interest. For example, the
1976 World Surrealist Exhibition included performances by
Honeyboy
Edwards.
Surrealism and international politics
Surrealism as a political force developed unevenly around the world, in some places more emphasis was on artistic practices, in other places political and in other places still, Surrealist praxis looked to supersize both the arts and politics. During the 1930s the Surrealist idea spread from Europe to North America, South America, Central America, the Caribbean, and throughout Asia. As both an artistic idea and as an ideology of political change.Politically, Surrealism was ultra-leftist,
communist, or anarchist. The split from Dada
has been characterised as a split between anarchists and
communists, with the Surrealists as communist. Breton and his
comrades supported Leon Trotsky
and his
International Left Opposition for a while, though there was an
openness to anarchism that manifested more fully after World War
II. Some Surrealists, such as Benjamin
Peret, Mary Low, and Juan Breá, aligned with forms of left
communism. Dalí
supported capitalism and the fascist dictatorship of Francisco
Franco but cannot be said to represent a trend in Surrealism in
this respect; in fact he was considered, by Breton and his
associates, to have betrayed and left Surrealism. Péret, Low, and
Breá joined the
POUM during the Spanish
Civil War.
Breton’s followers, along with the Communist
Party, were working for the "liberation of man." However,
Breton’s group refused to prioritize the proletarian struggle over
radical creation such that their struggles with the Party made the
late 1920s a turbulent time for both. Many individuals closely
associated with Breton, notably Louis
Aragon, left his group to work more closely with the
Communists.
Surrealists have often sought to link their
efforts with political ideals and activities. In the Declaration of
January 27, 1925, for example, members of the Paris-based
Bureau of Surrealist Research (including André Breton, Louis
Aragon, and, Antonin Artaud, as well as some two dozen others)
declared their affinity for revolutionary politics. While this was
initially a somewhat vague formulation, by the 1930s many
Surrealists had strongly identified themselves with communism. The
foremost document of this tendency within Surrealism is the
Manifesto for a Free Revolutionary Art, published under the names
of Breton and Diego
Rivera, but actually co-authored by Breton and Leon
Trotsky.
However, in 1933 the Surrealists’ assertion that
a 'proletarian literature' within a capitalist society was
impossible led to their break with the Association des Ecrivains et
Artistes Révolutionnaires, and the expulsion of Breton, Éluard and
Crevel from the Communist Party. although it is the contact between
Aimé
Césaire and Breton in the 1940s in Martinique that really lead
to the communication of what is known as 'black Surrealism'.
Anticolonial revolutionary writers in the
Négritude
movement of Martinique, a
French colony at the time, took up Surrealism as a revolutionary
method - a critique of European culture and a radical subjective.
This linked with other Surrealists and was very important for the
subsequent development of Surrealism as a revolutionary praxis. The
journal Tropiques,
featuring the work of Cesaire along with René
Ménil, Lucie
Thésée, Aristide
Maugée and others, was first published in 1940.
It is interesting to note that when in 1938 André
Breton traveled with his wife the painter Jacqueline Lamba to
Mexico to
meet Trotsky; staying as the guest of Diego
Rivera's former wife Guadalupe Marin; he met Frida Kahlo
and saw her paintings for the first time. Breton declared Kahlo to
be an "innate" Surrealist painter.
Internal politics
In 1929 the satellite group around the journal Le Grand Jeu, including Roger Gilbert-Lecomte, Maurice Henry and the Czech painter Josef Sima, was ostracized. Also in February, Breton asked Surrealists to assess their "degree of moral competence", and theoretical refinements included in the second manifeste du surréalisme excluded anyone reluctant to commit to collective action: Leiris, Limbour, Morise, Baron, Queneau, Prévert, Desnos, Masson and Boiffard. They moved to the periodical Documents, edited by Georges Bataille, whose anti-idealist materialism produced a hybrid Surrealism exposed the base instincts of humans.Other members were ousted over the years for a
variety of infractions, both political and personal, and others
left of to pursue creativity of their own style.
Golden age
Throughout the 1930s, Surrealism continued to
become more visible to the public at large. A Surrealist
group developed in Britain and, according to Breton, their 1936
London International Surrealist Exhibition was a high water
mark of the period and became the model for international
exhibitions.
Dalí
and Magritte
created the most widely recognized images of the movement. Dalí
joined the group in 1929, and participated in the rapid
establishment of the visual style between 1930 and 1935.
Surrealism as a visual movement had found a
method: to expose psychological truth by stripping ordinary objects
of their normal significance, in order to create a compelling image
that was beyond ordinary formal organization, in order to evoke
empathy from the viewer.
1931 marked a year when several Surrealist
painters produced works which marked turning points in their
stylistic evolution: Magritte's Voice of Space (La Voix des
airs)http://www.guggenheimcollection.org/site/movement_work_md_Surrealism_92_2.html
is an example of this process, where three large spheres
representing bells hang above a landscape. Another Surrealist
landscape from this same year is Yves Tanguy's
Promontory
Palace (Palais promontoire), with its molten forms and liquid
shapes. Liquid shapes became the trademark of Dalí, particularly in
his
The Persistence of Memory, which features the image of watches
that sag as if they are melting.
The characteristics of this style - a combination
of the depictive, the abstract, and the psychological - came to
stand for the alienation which many people felt in the modern period,
combined with the sense of reaching more deeply into the psyche, to
be "made whole with one's individuality".
From 1936 through 1938 Wolfgang
Paalen, Gordon
Onslow Ford and Roberto
Matta joined the group. Paalen contributed Fumage and Onslow
Ford Coulage as new
pictorial automatic techniques.
Long after personal, political and professional
tensions fragmented the Surrealist group, Magritte and Dalí
continued to define a visual program in the arts. This program
reached beyond painting, to encompass photography as well, as can
be seen from a Man Ray self
portrait, whose use of assemblage influenced Robert
Rauschenberg's collage boxes.
During the 1930s Peggy
Guggenheim, an important American art collector, married
Max
Ernst and began promoting work by other Surrealists such as
Tanguy and
the British artist John
Tunnard.
Major exhibitions in the 1930s
- 1936 - London International Surrealist Exhibition is organised in London by the art historian Herbert Read, with an introduction by André Breton.
- 1936 - Museum of Modern Art in New York shows the exhibition Fantastic Art, Dada and Surrealism.
- 1938 - A new International Surrealist Exhibition was held at the Beaux-arts Gallery, Paris, with more than 60 artists from different countries, and showed around 300 paintings, objects, collages, photographs and installations. The Surrealists wanted to create an exhibition which in itself would be a creative act and called on Marcel Duchamp to do so. At the exhibition's entrance he placed Salvador Dalí's Rainy Taxi (an old taxi rigged to produce a steady drizzle of water down the inside of the windows, and a shark-headed creature in the driver's seat and a blond mannequin crawling with live snails in the back) greeted the patrons who were in full evening dress. Surrealist Street filled one side of the lobby with mannequins dressed by various Surrealists. He designed the main hall to seem like subterranean cave with 1,200 coal bags suspended from the ceiling over a coal brazier with a single light bulb which provided the only lighting,http://www.toutfait.com/issues/volume2/issue_4/interviews/hirschhorn/popup_8.html so patrons were given flashlights with which to view the art. The floor was carpeted with dead leaves, ferns and grasses and the aroma of roasting coffee filled the air. Much to the Surrealists' satisfaction the exhibition scandalized the viewers.
Antonin
Artaud, one of the original Surrealists, rejected Western
theatre as a perversion of the original intent of theatre, which he
felt should be a religious and mystical experience. He thought that
rational discourse comprised "falsehood and illusion," which
embodied the worst of discourse. Endeavouring to create a new
theatrical form that would be immediate and direct, linking the
unconscious minds of performers and spectators, a sort of ritual
event, Artaud created the Theatre
of Cruelty where emotions, feelings, and the metaphysical were
expressed not through text or dialogue but physically, creating a
mythological, archetypal, allegorical vision, closely related to
the world of dreams.
These sentiments also led to the Theatre
of the Absurd whose inspiration came, in part, from silent film
and comedy, as well as the tradition of verbal nonsense in early
sound film (Laurel and
Hardy, W. C.
Fields, the Marx
Brothers).
Surrealism and comedy
Criticism of Surrealism
Feminist
Feminists have in the past critiqued the Surrealist movement, claiming that it is fundamentally a male movement and a male fellowship, despite the occasional few celebrated woman Surrealist painters and poets. They believe that it adopts typical male attitudes toward women, such as worshipping them symbolically through stereotypes and sexist norms. Women are often made to represent higher values and transformed into objects of desire and of mystery. One of the pioneers in feminist critique of Surrealism was Xavière Gauthier. Her book Surréalisme et sexualité (1971) inspired further important scholarship related to the marginalization of women in relation to "the avant-garde." However these criticisms are perhaps more so of other avant-garde movements like Situationism, where women had a much more subordinate role to the men. Also, despite the theoretical objectification, Surrealism as a living praxis allowed room for women artists and painters in particular to work and produce work on their own terms.Freudian
Freud initiated the
psychoanalytic critique of Surrealism with his remark that what
interested him most about the Surrealists was not their unconscious
but their conscious. His meaning was that the manifestations of and
experiments with psychic automatism highlighted by Surrealists as
the liberation of the unconscious were highly structured by ego
activity, similar to the activities of the dream censorship in
dreams, and that therefore it was in principle a mistake to regard
Surrealist poems and other art works as direct manifestations of
the unconscious, when they were indeed highly shaped and processed
by the ego. In this view, the Surrealists may have been producing
great works, but they were products of the conscious, not the
unconscious mind, and they deceived themselves with regard to what
they were doing with the unconscious. In psychoanalysis proper, the
unconscious does not just express itself automatically but can only
be uncovered through the analysis of resistance and transference in
the psychoanalytic process.
Situationist
While some individuals and groups on the core and
fringes of the Situationist
International were Surrealists themselves, others were very
critical of the movement, or indeed what remained of the movement
in the late 1950s and '60s. The Situationist International could
therefore be seen as a break and continuation of the Surrealist
praxis.
Timeline of Membership
See also
Techniques and humor
Surrealist publications
- Acéphale, a surrealist review created by Georges Bataille, published from 1936 to 1939
- Documents, a surrealist journal edited by Georges Bataille from 1929 to 1930
- Minotaure, a primarily surrealist-oriented publication founded by Albert Skira, published in Paris from 1933 to 1939
- La Révolution surréaliste, a seminal Surrealist publication founded by André Breton, published in Paris from 1924 to 1929
- View, an American art magazine, primarily covering avant-garde and surrealist art, published from 1940 to 1947
- VVV, a New York journal published by émigré European surrealists from 1942 through 1944
References
André
Breton
- Breton, André, Manifestoes of Surrealism containing the first, second and introduction to a possible third manifesto, the novel The Soluble Fish, and political aspects of the Surrealist movement. ISBN 0-472-17900-4 .
- Breton, André, What is Surrealism?: Selected Writings of André Breton. ISBN 0-87348-822-9 .
- Breton, André, Conversations: The Autobiography of Surrealism (Gallimard 1952) (Paragon House English rev. ed. 1993). ISBN 1-56924-970-9.
- Breton, André, The Abridged Dictionary of Surrealism, reprinted
in:
- Bonnet, Marguerite, ed. (1988). Oeuvres complètes, 1:328. Paris: Éditions Gallimard.
- Alexandrian, Sarane. Surrealist Art London: Thames & Hudson, 1970.
- Appollinaire, Guillaume 1917, 1991. Program note for Parade, printed in Oeuvres en prose complètes, 2:865-866, Pierre Caizergues and Michel Décaudin, eds. Paris: Éditions Gallimard.
- Brotchie, Alastair and Gooding, Mel, eds. A Book of Surrealist Games Berkeley, CA: Shambhala, 1995. ISBN 1-57062-084-9.
- Caws, Mary Ann Surrealist Painters and Poets: An Anthology 2001, MIT Press.
- Durozoi, Gerard, History of the Surrealist Movement Translated by Alison Anderson University of Chicago Press. 2004. ISBN 0-226-17411-5.
- Lewis, Helena. Dada Turns Red. Edinburgh, Scotland: University of Ednburgh Press, 1990.
- Lewis, Helena. The Politics Of Surrealism 1988
- Low Mary, Breá Juan, Red Spanish Notebook, City Light Books, Sans Francisco, 1979, ISBN 087286-132-5 http://www.benjamin-peret.org/benjamin-peret/bibliotheque/carnets-de-la-guerre-d_espagne.html
- Melly, George Paris and the Surrealists Thames & Hudson. 1991.
- Moebius, Stephan. Die Zauberlehrlinge. Soziologiegeschichte des Collège de Sociologie. Konstanz: UVK 2006. About the College of Sociology, its members and sociological impacts.
- Nadeau, Maurice. History of Surrealism Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press, 1989. ISBN 0-674-40345-2.
External links
André Breton writings
- Manifesto of Surrealism by André Breton. 1924.
- What is Surrealism?'' Lecture by Breton, Brussels 1934
Overview websites
- Dutch Surrealism,
- Dutch Surrealisme on Wikipedia.
- Timeline of Surrealism from Centre Pompidou.
- Le Surréalisme
- Surrealist.com, A general history of the art movement with artist biographies and art.
- Reviewed Surrealism links
Surrealism and politics
- The radical politics of Surrealism, 1919-1950, an article looking at Surrealisms connections to anarchist, socialist and working class politics.
- "Herbert Marcuse and the Surrealist Revolution", an article from Arsenal/Surrealist Subversion.
- "How the Surrealists sold out," The Guardian, 28 March 2007.
- Benjamin Péret.
surrealism in Arabic: سريالية
surrealism in Min Nan:
Chhiau-hiān-si̍t-chú-gī
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surrealism in Catalan: Surrealisme
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surrealism in German: Surrealismus
surrealism in Estonian: Sürrealism
surrealism in Modern Greek (1453-):
Υπερρεαλισμός
surrealism in Spanish: Surrealismo
surrealism in Esperanto: Superrealismo
surrealism in Persian: فراواقعگرایی
surrealism in French: Surréalisme
surrealism in Galician: Surrealismo
surrealism in Armenian: Սյուրռեալիզմ
surrealism in Croatian: Nadrealizam
surrealism in Italian: Surrealismo
surrealism in Hebrew: סוריאליזם
surrealism in Georgian: სიურრეალიზმი
surrealism in Kurdish: Surrealîzm
surrealism in Latvian: Sirreālisms
surrealism in Lithuanian: Siurrealizmas
surrealism in Hungarian: Szürrealizmus
surrealism in Macedonian: Надреализам
surrealism in Malayalam: സര്റിയലിസം
surrealism in Dutch: Surrealisme
surrealism in Japanese: シュルレアリスム
surrealism in Norwegian: Surrealisme
surrealism in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Surrealisme
surrealism in Narom: Surréalisme
surrealism in Polish: Surrealizm
surrealism in Portuguese: Surrealismo
surrealism in Romanian: Suprarealism
surrealism in Russian: Сюрреализм
surrealism in Albanian: Surrealizmi
surrealism in Simple English: Surrealism
surrealism in Slovak: Surrealizmus
surrealism in Slovenian: Nadrealizem
surrealism in Serbian: Надреализам
surrealism in Finnish: Surrealismi
surrealism in Swedish: Surrealism
surrealism in Tamil: அடிமன
வெளிப்பாட்டுவாதம்
surrealism in Thai: ลัทธิเหนือจริง
surrealism in Turkish: Gerçeküstücülük
surrealism in Ukrainian: Сюрреалізм
surrealism in Chinese:
超现实主义