What is Surrealism?: Selected WritingsPluto Press, 1978 - 389 pagina's |
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Pagina 154
... considered the most reliable , beginning with the family , and awakens the expectation , after the ruin of a mockingly ridiculous moral code , of a veritable science of morality . To these various influences which unite in forming ...
... considered the most reliable , beginning with the family , and awakens the expectation , after the ruin of a mockingly ridiculous moral code , of a veritable science of morality . To these various influences which unite in forming ...
Pagina 220
... considered ( in a state of immobility , and with no appreciable modification due to the facts of attraction and repulsion ; briefly , an exclusively visual angle ) . It is fitting , as a sequel to futurism , to take into account a ...
... considered ( in a state of immobility , and with no appreciable modification due to the facts of attraction and repulsion ; briefly , an exclusively visual angle ) . It is fitting , as a sequel to futurism , to take into account a ...
Pagina 245
... considered as having taken its substance . For surrealism - and I think this will be its glory someday - anything will have been considered good that could reduce these oppositions which have been presented as insurmountable ...
... considered as having taken its substance . For surrealism - and I think this will be its glory someday - anything will have been considered good that could reduce these oppositions which have been presented as insurmountable ...
Inhoudsopgave
Max Ernst7 | 7 |
Francis Picabia14 | 14 |
Leon Trotskys Lenin28 | 28 |
Copyright | |
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Aimé Césaire André Breton Apollinaire appeared Aragon artistic attitude automatic writing Baudelaire beautiful become believe Benjamin Péret bourgeois century Césaire colour Communist comrades Conroy Maddox consciousness considered cubism Dada dialectical dream Editions everything excerpts existence expression eyes fact Fourier France Franklin Rosemont freedom French Freud hand Hegel human humour idea intellectual International Surrealist Exhibition Lautréamont Lenin Leon Trotsky less liberation light literature living magic Manifesto Marcel Duchamp marvellous Max Ernst means mind moral myth nature never object organised ourselves painting Paris Paul Eluard Péret Picabia Pierre poem poetic poetry possible present proletarian published realise reality recognise remains René René Crevel reprinted revolution revolutionary Rimbaud seems sense social spirit Stalinist struggle surrealism surrealist group Surrealist Manifesto surrealist movement surrealist painter surrealist poet things thought tion Toyen Tristan Tzara words Yves Tanguy