What is Surrealism?Haskell House Publishers, 1974 - 90 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 11
Pagina 60
... beginning with Dante and Shakespeare at his best . In the course of many attempts I have made towards an analysis of what , under false pretences , is called genius , I have found nothing that could in the end be attributed to any other ...
... beginning with Dante and Shakespeare at his best . In the course of many attempts I have made towards an analysis of what , under false pretences , is called genius , I have found nothing that could in the end be attributed to any other ...
Pagina 75
... beginning surrealism should have confined itself almost entirely to the plane of language , nor that it should , after some incursion or other , return to that plane as if for the pleasure of behaving there in a conquered land . Nothing ...
... beginning surrealism should have confined itself almost entirely to the plane of language , nor that it should , after some incursion or other , return to that plane as if for the pleasure of behaving there in a conquered land . Nothing ...
Pagina 77
... beginning to make known its wants through us ; and finally we say that if it should be held that all that was thought before this infant — all that was thought ' classically ' - was good , then incontestably he is out for the whole of ...
... beginning to make known its wants through us ; and finally we say that if it should be held that all that was thought before this infant — all that was thought ' classically ' - was good , then incontestably he is out for the whole of ...
Inhoudsopgave
SURREALISM AND PAINTING Page | 9 |
EXHIBITION X Y | 25 |
THE FIRST DALI EXHIBITION | 27 |
3 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
able æsthetic or moral ALBERTO GIACOMETTI appear Aragon artistic automatic writing beauty becoming beginning believe Braque bring brought capable cause cease conscious consider continue critical cubism Dali Dali's definition desire dialectical materialism discovery domain dream Eluard emotion epoch everything existence expression exterior world eyes face fact fascism feel GIORGIO DE CHIRICO hand hope idea images impossible intellectual Isidore Ducasse kind l'amour la poésie La Révolution Surréaliste Lautréamont and Rimbaud least less longer marvellous material Max Ernst means method mind movement Naville negation never object OSCAR DOMINGUEZ ourselves paranoiac particular pass Paul Eluard perfect perhaps Picasso plane poetic poetry possible present problem question reality reason remains René Crevel Revolution revolutionary rose seems sentence simply social spite Surrealism and Painting surrealist activity Surrealist Manifesto systematic things thought tion Tristan Tzara turn Tzara whole window word surrealism