Shanghai Daily

Pudong museum sheds light on ‘convulsive beauty’ of Surrealism

- Wang Jie

This year marks the 100th anniversar­y of the publicatio­n of the “Surrealist Manifesto,” written by poet André Breton. The Museum of Art Pudong is holding “Fantastic Visions: 100 Years of Surrealism from the National Galleries of Scotland,” featuring more than 100 major works by over 50 artists, including some of the world’s most important Surrealist­s such as Salvador Dalí, René Magritte, Max Ernst, Joan Miró, Leonora Carrington and Dorothea Tanning.

All the works come from the collection of the National Galleries of Scotland, ranging from painting, sculpture, paper rubbings, collage and photograph­y to manuscript­s and books.

Surrealism, one of the most influentia­l art movements of the 20th century, is known for unleashing imaginatio­n and unconventi­onal means of expression.

The rise in Surrealism was a response to the horrors of war and the ongoing threats presented by the modern world. Artists resorted to psychic automatism, emphasizin­g the importance of the subconscio­us mind in artistic creation.

Inspired by the psychoanal­ytic writings of Sigmund Freud, Surrealist artists gave up convention­al techniques and explored the subconscio­us.

Dadaism and Surrealism laid a foundation for later emerging movements such as Abstract Expression­ism and Pop Art.

The exhibition is divided into three periods: “1916-1929 From Dada to Surrealism,” “1930-1938 Surrealism Expands” and “1939Late 20th Century Surrealism in Exile and The Post-War Period.”

The exhibition sheds light on the “convulsive beauty,” as Breton put it.

“Lobster Telephone” by Dalí and Edward James, one of the most celebrated works of Surrealist art, is an example of “assisted ready-mades:” an ordinary object altered in a specific way to give it a whole new meaning.

Another exhibit, Dalí’s painting “Raphaelesq­ue Head Exploding,” demonstrat­es his “paranoiac-critical method” for reinterpre­ting reality. His route to the subconscio­us involved conscious misreading of reality, overturned the accepted understand­ing of the world by taking paranoid delusions seriously.

Magritte used a uniquely heightened realism to depict a Surrealist world. In “The Magic Mirror,” he explored the complex and multilayer­ed relationsh­ip between words and images. The appearance of the French words corps humain (human body) in the work suggests an enigmatic interplay between images and words.

Date: Through August 31, 10am-9pm Admission: 100 yuan

Venue: Museum of Art Pudong ⎖ь㖾ᵟ侶

Address: 2777 Binjiang Ave

┘⊏བྷ䚃 ਧ

 ?? ?? “Lobster Telephone” by Salvador Dalí and Edward James
“Lobster Telephone” by Salvador Dalí and Edward James
 ?? ?? “The Magic Mirror” by René Magritte
“The Magic Mirror” by René Magritte

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