What is Surrealism?Faber & Faber, 1936 - 90 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 25
Pagina 15
... fact of Picasso's immense responsibility . A single failure of will- power on his part would be sufficient for everything we are concerned with to be at least put back , if not wholly lost . His admirable perseverance is such a valuable ...
... fact of Picasso's immense responsibility . A single failure of will- power on his part would be sufficient for everything we are concerned with to be at least put back , if not wholly lost . His admirable perseverance is such a valuable ...
Pagina 70
... fact that its very definition holds that it must escape , in its written manifestations , or any others , from all control exercised by the reason . Apart from the puerility of wishing to bring a supposedly Marxist control to bear on ...
... fact that its very definition holds that it must escape , in its written manifestations , or any others , from all control exercised by the reason . Apart from the puerility of wishing to bring a supposedly Marxist control to bear on ...
Pagina 86
... fact that its most recent advance is producing a fundamental crisis of the " object " . It is essentially upon the object that surrealism has thrown most light in recent years . Only the very close examination of the many recent specu ...
... fact that its most recent advance is producing a fundamental crisis of the " object " . It is essentially upon the object that surrealism has thrown most light in recent years . Only the very close examination of the many recent specu ...
Inhoudsopgave
SURREALISM AND PAINTING Page | 9 |
EXHIBITION X Y | 25 |
THE COMMUNICATING VESSELS | 31 |
2 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
able æsthetic or moral ALBERTO GIACOMETTI ANDRÉ BRETON appear Aragon artistic attempt automatic writing beauty beginning believe Braque bring capable cause ceased conscious consider continue critical cubism D. H. LAWRENCE Dali Dali's definition desire dialectical materialism discovery domain dream elements Eluard emotion epoch everything existence expression exterior world eyes Faber face fact fascism feel genius GIORGIO DE CHIRICO hand hope idea images impossible intellectual Isidore Ducasse kind l'amour la poésie La Révolution Surréaliste lack Lautréamont and Rimbaud less longer marvellous material Max Ernst means method mind movement Naville negation never object ourselves paranoiac particular pass Paul Eluard perfect Picasso plane poetic poetry possible preoccupations present problem question reality reason remains René Crevel Revolution revolutionary rose seems sentence simply social surrealist activity Surrealist Manifesto systematic things thought tion Tristan Tzara turn Tzara values whole