Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Ask for recommendation, what surreal artistic analysis is there, or about

Ask for recommendation, what surreal artistic analysis is there, or about

Surrealism is a universal literary and cultural trend of thought, and its philosophical basis is Hegel's dialectics and Bergson's "life impulse" theory. Hegel believes that all the results of people's thinking and behavior are not final, and absolute truth is only reflected in the deepening of understanding. Bergson regards life impulse as the psychological basis of literature and art, and advocates irrational expressions such as intuition and telepathy.

Realism is a school of literature and art that originated in France, originated from Dadaism, and has a far-reaching influence on visual arts. It was popular in European literary and art circles from 1920 to 1930. Its main feature is that the so-called "surreal" and "super-rational" dreams and hallucinations are the source of artistic creation, and it is believed that only this "unconscious" world beyond reality can get rid of all constraints and truly show the true face of objective facts. Surrealism has greatly influenced the traditional view of art. It is also often called the surrealist movement. Or simply surreal.

Freud initiated a new era of psychoanalysis through the analysis of dreams. Influenced by it, around 1922, surrealism appeared in Dadaism art, which had a great influence on Europe and America. Surrealism painters emphasize that the unity of dream and reality is the absolute truth, so they try to unify life and death, dream and reality, which is mysterious, horrible and grotesque. Representative painters include Joan Miro, Dali, Ernst, Magritte, Yves Tangi, paul delvaux, Mei Sen Klee and others.