「surrealist」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

surrealist

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  • cquisitions for the Tate collection included Surrealist and American artworks.
  • Paris during the 1920s, at the height of the surrealist and avant-garde movements.
  • May 1900 - 12 December 1971) was an English Surrealist and Modernist designer and painter.
  • Rubberbandits style of comedy is satirical, surrealist and crude, drawing comparisons to fellow Iri
  • "poetic prose" and drama, especially French surrealist and existential writing, but she translated
  • /French seriocomic road movie in the Belgian surrealist and absurdist tradition, directed by Bouli L
  • wat's music was recently licensed for use by Surrealist animators the Hive of Dukes, who had recentl
  • esthetics and culture, preferring a modified surrealist approach.
  • It contains a large collection of Dada and Surrealist art and literature, much of which was gifted
  • the imagination, leading to comparisons with Surrealist art in the twentieth century.
  • the United States, put on the first show of Surrealist art and, with Kirstein, helped engineer the
  • Nesuhi was an avid collector of Surrealist art.
  • ld become a staple of both visual comedy and Surrealist art: that of inanimate objects refusing to o
  • r Mellor (7 June 1921 - 2005) was an English surrealist artist and publisher of poetry.
  • intellectual and a poet, and Pablo Weisz, a surrealist artist and doctor.
  • so contained a controversial poster by Swiss surrealist artist H. R. Giger entitled Penis Landscape.
  • r's Billboard 200, and featured cover art by surrealist artist H.R. Giger, who designed the Xenomorp
  • ependent gallery devoted to the works of the surrealist artist.
  • unu also published graphics from Surrealist artists such as Victor Brauner.
  • istence of a distinctive Birmingham group of surrealist artists dates from the meeting of Conroy Mad
  • t 2001) was an English anarchist, artist and surrealist author and illustrator.
  • film is the third and final part of Kitano's surrealist autobiographical trilogy, starting with Take
  • International Surrealist Bulletin, Number 4, September 1936.
  • ollection Last Week's Apocalypse, was deemed surrealist by Publishers Weekly, featured a cover illus
  • nds, the crack of the shuttle, and generally surrealist character to have an intense imaginative lif
  • d an important influence on the later French surrealist, Christian d'Orgeix.
  • pher, collagist (having invented a number of surrealist collage methods including the "landscapade"
  • This was Burrowes first screenplay, a surrealist comedy set in working-class Dublin.
  • Her work has also been described as " surrealist", and during 1938 one surrealist described K
  • silent film made in 1922, directed by famed surrealist director Germaine Dulac.
  • nt abstract for quite sometime, later adding Surrealist elements into his work.
  • Garip poets used vernacular speech and surrealist elements in their poems.
  • work contains a combination of realistic and surrealist elements.
  • He showed his work in the 1947 International Surrealist Exhibition in Paris.
  • played a major role in organizing the World Surrealist Exhibition held at Gallery Black Swan in Chi
  • the name for the catalogue of the 1976 World Surrealist Exhibition.
  • were invited to exhibit at the major London surrealist exhibitions of 1937 and 1938 - the group ins
  • She is the author of Surrealist Experiences: 1001 Dawns, 221 Midnights (Blac
  • described himself in the past as a "Marxist surrealist feminist who is not just anti something but
  • ench actress best known for appearing in the surrealist film Un chien andalou.
  • gyman) is considered by many to be the first surrealist film.
  • many Free improvisation music concerts with surrealist, fluxist and dadaist overtones, incorporatin
  • After the war, Melly found work in a London surrealist gallery, working with E.L.T. Mesens and even
  • Surrealist gardener Sam Edgar, one of the great philoso
  • eath in the Garden is an adventure film with Surrealist gestures and symbolism.
  • Maddox officially joined the British Surrealist Group in 1938.
  • The Chicago Surrealist Group has been frequently criticised.
  • He was secretary for the British Surrealist Group and edited the English language surrea
  • criticisms and denouncements of the Chicago Surrealist Group included in the reference section Arse
  • de Arte and joined in the activities of the surrealist group on the island.
  • er she was actually expelled from the London Surrealist Group for not giving her unconditional suppo
  • y with del Renzio over the leadership of the Surrealist Group in England in 1944.
  • early 1940 she officially joined the British Surrealist Group, whose meetings she was to attend for
  • the 1920s and published his first novel, the surrealist Handji, in 1931.
  • nequin parts had been inspired by the German surrealist Hans Bellmer.
  • to create narratives, but rather allegorical surrealist imagery of the unfathomable.
  • The book makes extensive use of surrealist imagery, depicting humans as apes who, as a
  • porary French 3D artist mostly known for his surrealist images rendered in POV-Ray.
  • web site project The Book of Beginnings with surrealist images accompanied with pieces of unfinished
  • 16 paintings; they are accompanied by verse, surrealist images that are exquisite by their bizarrene
  • o in Puerto Rico has a strong figurative and surrealist influence and is the period that brought mos
  • as a sculptor and as a painter have a clear surrealist influence.
  • ally those of Analytical Cubism, it contains Surrealist inspired aspects, such as a more colorful pa
  • He was invited to the Paris exhibition by surrealist leader Andre Breton.
  • driving rhythm, complementing cryptic, often surrealist lyrics.
  • gazine described as "a five-hour marathon of surrealist madness", incorporated rubber alligators, ma
  • artist best known for his editorship of the Surrealist magazine View (1940-1947) in New York City,
  • In his Surrealist Manifesto, written in 1924, he praised Freud
  • Vaucher also uses the surrealist method to express her aforementioned ideals
  • The Surrealist Movement in the United States was started by
  • trial Workers of the World with links to the Surrealist movement in France, the British libertarian
  • Formed partly as a reaction to the Surrealist movement that was dominant in the 1920s, the
  • pularized roughly contemporaneously with the Surrealist movement, sometimes incorporated texts such
  • L'Oie de Cravan are often influenced by the surrealist movement.
  • or and translator, often associated with the Surrealist movement.
  • g in the French language, connected with the surrealist movement.
  • never had any formal links with the official Surrealist movement.
  • , art critic and writer, and a member of the Surrealist Movement.
  • It sounds like a surrealist movie.
  • A surrealist music video became one of MTV's most played
  • Based on a surrealist musical Rebecca Moore wrote and directed in
  • Prepare to Meet Your Maker is the title of a surrealist musical mystery play in six episodes by Pete
  • ngers of surrealism" in Britain, producing a Surrealist Nude by 1930 and being described as a surrea
  • Conroy Maddox - A Surrealist Odyssey - Belgrave Gallery, London, 2001
  • Enrico Donati (1909-2008), American Surrealist painter and sculptor of Italian birth
  • Ithell Colquhoun (1906 - 1988) was a British Surrealist painter and author.
  • st collection of paintings from this Belgian surrealist painter in the world.
  • nglish illustrator, designer, cartoonist and surrealist painter in oil and watercolour.
  • of an art foundation named after the Spanish surrealist painter Angel Planells, personal friend of S
  • mber 1912 - 14 January 2005), was an English surrealist painter, collagist, writer and lecturer; and
  • Gaston Bogaert is a surrealist painter.
  • 1935: Represented the surrealist painting exhibition in Copenhagen
  • mics world's closest brush with the world of surrealist paintings (and by the way, Piraro is an exce
  • The painting was one of many done for surrealist patron and Magritte supporter Edward James.
  • West Dean House for William James, father of Surrealist patron Edward James.
  • ncreasing interest in experimental music and surrealist performance art.
  • He contributed to the Dada (and later surrealist) periodical Literature.
  • zing in the art of the Dada movement and the Surrealist periods.
  • was characterized by an anti-capitalist and surrealist perspective on aesthetics and politics, acco
  • res the phenomenon of "wrong numbers" from a surrealist perspective, which was published by Black Sw
  • ation of American modernists, and cubist and surrealist pieces.
  • Quirke writes for television with surrealist playwright Robin French.
  • His admiration of the surrealist poet and Catholic mystic Max Jacob (1876-194
  • ecember 1898 - 9 November 1929) was a French surrealist poet.
  • In 1927, he published Japan's first surrealist poetry magazine, Fukuiku Taru Kafu Yo.
  • nfluence on his earlier poems of Dadaist and Surrealist principles.
  • o, she contributed to numerous international surrealist publications (including del Renzio's Arson:
  • He has also formed two record companies, Surrealist Records and Derrida Records.
  • lumination: Walter Benjamin and the Paris of Surrealist Revolution.
  • om bronze and cast stone, placing him in the Surrealist school of art.
  • as a potential source of inspiration for the surrealist science-fiction film Tamala 2010: A Punk Cat
  • F. E. McWilliam; later the well known Irish surrealist sculptor.
  • 970 when he was raising capital to build his surrealist sculpture garden Las Pozas.
  • of international film festivals, the film is surrealist silent film about a woman that deals with he
  • Mid 1930s working in a surrealist style, under the pseudonym "Max Ebert".
  • n allegorical figurative style that combines surrealist, symbolist and pre-Raphaelite sensibilities,
  • (an avant-garde periodical with Dadaist and Surrealist tendencies), which published reproductions o
  • The Solar Anus is a short Surrealist text written by the French writer and philos
  • ecurity Committee Chief of the Revolutionary Surrealist Vandal Party (RSVP), Advisor to the Niccolo
  • Surrealism: Surrealist Visuality - Keele University Press, 1996
  • He was an early surrealist, was liberal-minded, and preached vitality.
  • He had been painting surrealist watercolours from the age of 15, but took up
  • "Surreal Estate," review of several surrealist webcomics, Comixtalk, 09/08
  • erest, and probably influenced modernist and surrealist Western artists such as Henri Matisse, Marc
  • Rosemont is the editor of Surrealist Women: An International Anthology (Universit
  • Delhez began exhibiting caricatures and surrealist work while in college.
  • al Art Lodge presented their psychologically surrealist works, challenging the viewer using simple d
  • She was the partner of Claude Cahun, surrealist writer and photographer.
  • eneration, he was the most acclaimed Serbian surrealist writer, and a revolutionary socialist activi
  • el, The Castle of Argol is dedicated to that surrealist writer, to whom he devoted a whole book in 1
  • of Southern California and heads a class in surrealist writing at the UCLA Extension Writers' Progr