As André Breton and his fellow surrealists never tired of affirming, the transformative surrealizing impulse long antedated the surrealist moment (hence the movement's interest in developing and reconfiguring a force-field of multiple traditions or anti-canons). To some degree, surrealism's truth lay outside the movement proper, and a fortiori outside individual creative works, which while they could approximate certain dreams, obsessions, or lived moments, were but intimations of a greater revelation. Surrealism can best be described in terms of its constant search, articulated from Breton's 1924 Manifeste du surréalisme onward, for the marvelous, that gold of time that dwelled, no longer in the philosopher's stone, but in the unexpected t...
In the 1924 Manifesto of Surrealism surrealist leader André Breton (1896-1966) defined Surrealism as...
textThis report analyzes André Breton’s particular brand of travel-writing that emerges from his fou...
Overall view with frame; André Breton himself remarked that 'Miró is the most surrealist of us all',...
Despite lifting the veil of those most primordial of forces, Eros and Thanatos, both of which are ro...
Item does not contain fulltextThis book offers a new perspective on a long-debated issue: the role o...
A fascination with objects turned away from their original function lies at the root of surrealist t...
The surrealist movement began as a consequence of the social, economical, and political disruptions ...
It has been said that Surrealism was nothing if not deeply involved with occultism and Western esote...
This paper explores a polemic between André Breton and Georges Bataille around the question of the p...
André Breton’s collection provides a unique perspective on the environment within which the principl...
André Breton, leader of the Surrealist movement, which he had founded with others in 1924 in the wak...
This paper analyses the definition, its sources, merits and demerits. The French poet and critic And...
This article narrates for the first time the competing views over Impressionism in America and Franc...
During the 1920s and 1930s in Europe, Andre Breton was actively engaged in anti-colonial pursuits as...
Although known as one of the most doctrinaire movements of the historical avant-garde – mostly due t...
In the 1924 Manifesto of Surrealism surrealist leader André Breton (1896-1966) defined Surrealism as...
textThis report analyzes André Breton’s particular brand of travel-writing that emerges from his fou...
Overall view with frame; André Breton himself remarked that 'Miró is the most surrealist of us all',...
Despite lifting the veil of those most primordial of forces, Eros and Thanatos, both of which are ro...
Item does not contain fulltextThis book offers a new perspective on a long-debated issue: the role o...
A fascination with objects turned away from their original function lies at the root of surrealist t...
The surrealist movement began as a consequence of the social, economical, and political disruptions ...
It has been said that Surrealism was nothing if not deeply involved with occultism and Western esote...
This paper explores a polemic between André Breton and Georges Bataille around the question of the p...
André Breton’s collection provides a unique perspective on the environment within which the principl...
André Breton, leader of the Surrealist movement, which he had founded with others in 1924 in the wak...
This paper analyses the definition, its sources, merits and demerits. The French poet and critic And...
This article narrates for the first time the competing views over Impressionism in America and Franc...
During the 1920s and 1930s in Europe, Andre Breton was actively engaged in anti-colonial pursuits as...
Although known as one of the most doctrinaire movements of the historical avant-garde – mostly due t...
In the 1924 Manifesto of Surrealism surrealist leader André Breton (1896-1966) defined Surrealism as...
textThis report analyzes André Breton’s particular brand of travel-writing that emerges from his fou...
Overall view with frame; André Breton himself remarked that 'Miró is the most surrealist of us all',...