「Surrealism」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Surrealism

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:60件

  • The Edge of Surrealism: A Roger Caillois Reader.Edited and with an
  • Surrealism, a term first used by art critic Guillaume A
  • Maddox had become a convert to surrealism after discovering one of Wilenski's books in
  • Aberth, Susan L. Leonora Carrington - Surrealism, Alchemy and Art (Lund Humphries, 2004).
  • rent artistic style: expressionism, realism, surrealism, American scene painting, cubism, pop art an
  • ed by expressionist German cinema, by French surrealism and American film noir.
  • It includes works from PopArt, Abstract and Surrealism, and has one of the largest Picasso collecti
  • useum of Modern Art - 'Mirror Images: Women, Surrealism and Self Representation'
  • m, the singer showed a new-found interest in Surrealism and the Dada movement.
  • William Rubin, "Arshile Gorky, Surrealism and the New American Painting," In Henry Gel
  • 1963) was an American painter influenced by Surrealism and was a contributor to Abstract Expression
  • As a creative artist within the fields of surrealism and existentialism, Rosenthal brings existen
  • rania, where his deep art culture, taste for surrealism and weird sense of humour could show at thei
  • ealistic representation into abstraction and surrealism, and “teetering,” as she puts it, “between c
  • It misses crucial aspects of the book's surrealism and satire, though it has a fair number of c
  • Bogza did not however cut off links with Surrealism, and was one of the few to be acquainted wit
  • psychedelia influenced by avant-garde jazz, surrealism, and world music traditions.
  • ers such as Alasdair Gray who have also used surrealism and magic realism in their work.
  • ay come across, albeit tinged with a hint of surrealism and comedy referenced from their own stereot
  • osmic horror stories, library music, English surrealism, and the dark side of psychedelia".
  • ation from folklore and nature combined with surrealism and spiritual themes to create a style that
  • ing the quality & popularity of contemporary surrealism and the pop-surrealist movement in the Unite
  • At 20 he became interested in surrealism and, with his lifelong friend Eric Thacker,
  • pewriters, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Karl Popper, surrealism, atheism, literature.
  • 8 psychodrama which incorporates elements of surrealism, black comedy, and expressionism.
  • Modernism, Expressionism, Dadaism and early Surrealism, but Van Ostaijen's style is very much his o
  • Again humour is a feature, as is surrealism, but he also writes serious love poetry, and
  • d “Playfulness in Visual Arts / Renaissance, Surrealism, Dada.”
  • In particular he draws on surrealism, dadaism, the contemporary avant-garde and m
  • r their seamless yet painterly renderings of Surrealism dreamscapes.
  • Beyond simply an artistic style, however, Surrealism encompassed a philosophy and a way of viewin
  • influences were Mexican muralism and French surrealism, even though he rejected both schools of pai
  • presence also at del Renzio's November 1942 Surrealism exhibition, Maddox and Robert Melville split
  • iled the story as "the best blend of kitsch, surrealism, fantasy and comedy-drama seen in our favour
  • xclusively from contemporary participants in surrealism from thirty-one countries.
  • , by European vanguard movements, notably by Surrealism, he joined a generation of socially consciou
  • g articles and takings of position regarding Surrealism in arts and literature".
  • rn in Ledbury, Herefordshire, and discovered surrealism in 1935, spending the rest of his life explo
  • an important influence on expressionism and surrealism in painting, two movements which descend dir
  • elements of mime, expressionist theatre, and surrealism in its presentations.
  • aried influences, ranging from neorealism to surrealism, in a dialectic relation between his own ego
  • l: Texts and Contexts (1997), Robert Desnos: Surrealism in the Twenty-First Century (2006) and Dada
  • of Cubism in 1919, and the birth of Dada and Surrealism in the 1920s, contemporary artists became in
  • sm and Expressionism (while and anticipating Surrealism), Kandinsky's work had a strong influence on
  • His works was initially related with surrealism, later he referred to folk and classical tra
  • ism, his work was more in line with European surrealism Later in his career he taught extensively.
  • "Sea" is considered as the beginning of the surrealism painting in Japan, and had a big influence o
  • ecstacy, banality - and influences (dadaism, surrealism, pataphysics, Wittgenstein, Stirner, Sade et
  • e out, Dreams & Everyday Life, Andre Breton, Surrealism, Rebel Worker, SDS & the Seven Cities of Cib
  • in the Grave features a variety of domestic surrealism, similar to 2point4 children.
  • liams along with infusions of European dada, surrealism, structuralist and post-structuralist though
  • Surrealism: Surrealist Visuality - Keele University Pre
  • s were included in the exhibition Australian Surrealism: the Agapitos/Wilson collection, held at the
  • es biting wit, pointed irony and elements of surrealism to construct a parable reflecting the moral
  • The dark comedy often uses surrealism to achieve its goals.
  • As in much of Morris' work, surrealism was an important part of the programme, the
  • Surrealism was supposed to be more than a style of pain
  • Initially the gallery showcased European Surrealism, Wassily Kandinsky, and other European artis
  • The two panels for pop art and surrealism were completed at the Broad Ripple Art Fair
  • s an academic and art critic specialising in surrealism, with emphasis on Conroy Maddox and Desmond