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         Dada & Surrealism:     more books (100)
  1. Dada's Boys: Masculinity after Duchamp by David Hopkins, 2008-03-19
  2. Max Ernst, Dada and the art of Surrealism by William A. Camfield, 1993
  3. Max Ernst Dada and the Dawn of Surrealism by n_an_a, 1993
  4. Surrealism and the Spanish Civil War by Robin Adele Greeley, 2006-09-15
  5. Modernism - Dada - Postmodernism (Avant-Garde & Modernism Studies) by Richard Sheppard, 1999-12-25
  6. Magnifying Mirrors: Women, Surrealism, and Partnership by Renee Riese Hubert, 1994-05-01
  7. Creativity: Psychoanalysis, Surrealism and Creative Writing by Kevin Brophy, 1998-03-01
  8. The Historical Development of Surrealism and the Relationships Between Hemispheric Specializations of the Brain (Studies in Comparative Literature) by Shelley M. Quinn, 1991-11
  9. Irrational Modernism: A Neurasthenic History of New York Dada by Amelia Jones, 2005-10-01
  10. Surrealism, Politics and Culture (Studies in European Cultural Transition)
  11. Surrealism and the Exotic by Louis Tythacott, 2003-03-21
  12. Dada: The Collections of The Museum of Modern Art
  13. Surrealism, Feminism, Psychoanalysis by Natalya Lusty, 2007-11-05
  14. Memoirs of a Dada Drummer (The Documents of Twentieth Century Art) by Richard Huelsenbeck, 1991-06-06

101. BildMuseet - Pressrelease Moderna Museet
c/o BildMuseet dada AND surrealism, is comprised of about fifty The exhibition takes dada and surrealism as its point of departure.
http://www.bildmuseet.umu.se/pressrelease-moderna03.html
Moderna Museet c/o BildMuseet DADA AND SURREALISM
18 May - 31 August 2003; during the summer 2003
BildMuseet is showing a major exhibition of works
from the Moderna Museet collection. The exhibition, Moderna Museet
c/o BildMuseet - DADA AND SURREALISM, is comprised of about fifty
Swedish and international works dating from 1921 to 1999.
In connection with the refurbishment of the museum building on
Skeppsholmen, a few museums outside Stockholm have been offered the
opportunity to show highlights from the Moderna Museet collection.
BildMuseet is the only museum in northern Sweden to take part in this
collaboration with Moderna Museet.

102. Qango : Arts: Art History: Periods And Movements: Dada And Surrealism
dada and surrealism, all of Qango only this category, Options Help Home Arts Art History Periods and Movements dada and surrealism
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103. CLEARVUE & SVE » Masterworks Of Western Art: Dada & Surrealism DVD
Masterworks of Western Art dada surrealism DVD RELATED PRODUCTS. Masterworks of Western Art dada surrealism Video
http://www.clearvue.com/productDetail.asp?objectID=21111

104. Dreaming With Open Eyes: Dada And Surrealist Art
Dreaming with Open Eyes dada and Surrealist Art review of exhibit drawn from the Schwarz collection including works by Duchamp, Man Ray, Dali,
http://www.culturevulture.net/ArtandArch/DreamingWithOpenEyes.htm

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Dreaming with Open Eyes: Dada and Surrealist Art
from the Vera, Silvia and Arturo Schwartz Collection San Francisco Legion of Honor
February 2 - April 28, 2002 Toronto Art Gallery of Ontario
June 14 - September 8, 2002 Suggested reading Dada and Surrealism (1998), Matthew Gale
Dada: Art and Anti Art
(1997), Hans Richter
The Rise of Surrealism:

Cubism, Dada, and the Pursuit of the Marvelous
(2001), Willard Bohn Duchamp: La Joconde aux Mustaches Buy it at barewalls.com Rugs from Design Within Reach If abstraction is at the heart of modernism, then Dadaism and Surrealism are central to its intellect. Dada was a response by artists and poets to the horrors of World War I. With an anti-art attitude (the name, literally "rocking horse," was selected randomly from a dictionary), the Dada movement mocked the rational and the conventional. Later, in the early 1920's, André Breton, rejecting the nihilism of Dada, founded Surrealism which, influenced strongly by the work of Freud, explored the unconscious, in particular the world of dreaming and its attendant sexuality. The Surrealists advocated "automatic" writing and painting in which it was thought the artist's unconscious would be revealed. Arturo Schwarz is an art dealer, publisher, and scholar who counted among his friends Breton, Marcel Duchamp, and Man Ray, all prominent in these movements. Schwarz has gifted his collection of Dada and Surrealist art and ephemera to the Israel Museum which has mounted the exhibit

105. Hypertext Poetry Viewed As An Amalgamation Of Twentieth Century
dada and Surrealist aesthetics stressed the essence of pure thought. Consequently, their art expressed an attraction to play within the realm of the
http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/511/projects/pfordresher/final/Surreal.h
Hypertext Poetry Viewed as an Amalgamation of Twentieth Century Aesthetics Dada and Surrealism
    The year 1915 marked the beginning of two radically influencial aesthetic movements in Twentieth Century art. The origins of both the Surrealist aesthetic and that of the Dadaists can be traced back to the same point in this century. Set in the context of Europe after the first World War, these two artistic movements focused their intellectual and creative attention on fantasy and the construction of the unreal. Emerging out of the destruction and choas of the early Twentieth Century, the artists within these two aesthetic camps viewed abstraction as the key to authentic expression because it revealed the pure, subconscious, dream-like realm of the human condition. The aesthetics of both the Dadaists and the Surrealists concentrated on the creation of art, and the expression of an aesthetic, which lingered above the real. Philosophically, Surrealism concentrated on the associative nature of thought, and the importance of its free, unmitigated expression. Dada and Surrealist aesthetics stressed the essence of pure thought. Consequently, their art expressed an attraction to play within the realm of the subconscious. Ideally, the exposition of this playful thought was unconstrained by reason and societal conditions. Thought was believed to be more free and more real than any external method of communication. Thus the Surrealist aesthetic was an exploration into the free reality of the dreamscape.

106. The Metropolitan Museum Of Art - News From The Met: Press Releases
Ernst (18911976) was a founding member of the dada and Surrealist movements in Europe and was one of the most ingenious artists of the 20th century.
http://www.metmuseum.org/news/newspressrelease.asp?PressReleaseId={674C797F-3A57

107. Surrealism WebQuest
Like Dadaism, from which it arose, surrealism uses art as a weapon against the evils and restrictions that Surrealists see in society.
http://www.gouchercenter.edu/lgardner/surreal_quest.htm
Fantasy Art
http://www.mcs.csuhayward.edu/~malek/Dali3.html
http://artwork.barewalls.com/product/framer.exe?ITEMID=13498 A WebQuest designed by L. Gardner
Perry Hall High School. Baltimore County Public Schools Introduction Task Process Evaluation ... Teacher Page
Introduction
Surrealism is a movement in art and literature. It was founded in Paris in 1924 by the French poet Andre Breton. Like Dadaism, from which it arose, Surrealism uses art as a weapon against the evils and restrictions that Surrealists see in society. (worldbookonline.com). What restrictions do you see in our society or the world around you today? Can artwork represent a dream world? Do you remember your dreams? You will work in groups to research the ideas and works of Dada and Surrealist artists and then each of you will create a piece of computer artwork that expresses your own modern Surrealist ideas.
Task
You will be creating a modern Surrealist piece of artwork using the computer as your main tool. Before beginning, you will need to develop an understanding of the ideas and artwork of the artists from the dada and surrealist art movements. You will be in groups of three with each of you completing a different part of the research on a particular artist. Your group will then create a PowerPoint presentation to share your research with the class.
Student example created in PhotoShop. ©2003 Matt S.

108. Untitled Document
The dada and Surrealist artists took great effort in the selection, The dada and Surrealist, through their use of something familiar demanded and often
http://www.csuchico.edu/art/contrapposto/contrapposto01/197/gednalske.html

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Setting Fire to Fire:
The Dada/Surrealist Adoption
Of the Trade Card Collage
By
Jennifer Gednalske No event, invention, philosophy, scientific discovery, artistic movement or doctrine has so powerfully affected modern culture as the advent of mass advertising. From its very beginning in the late 19th century, advertising sought to entice consumers, and women in particular, through both imagery and written wordall carefully chosen with the explicit intent to influence and capture a target audience's attention. Through advertising's focus on the visual aesthetic to seduce consumers, inevitably art and advertising would become intertwined, producing a mainstream or popular culture that responded positively to this new consumerism, represented by the bourgeoisie, and a counter-culture movementthe avant-garde, which reacted against this mainstream.1 The trade card industry and subsequent scrapbook collection began in the early 1870s. Advertisers by this time had discovered their best target group was middle class women, the main shoppers of the new consumer culture that had emerged with the second wave of the industrial revolutionthe beginning of the machine age. While the first generation of bourgeoisie women had not grown up with brand name products, they did not have strong connections or loyalties to any specific company's product.3 The trade card advertisers attempted, therefore, to target the second-generation bourgeoisie, using the cards as, among other things, a way to familiarise future shoppers with specific brands of products.

109. Notes To Chapter 1 Of Owen Smith's Fluxus: The History Of An Attitude, Discussin
The need to consider Duchamp separately from Dadaism and surrealism is also a result of the fact that his relationship to these two movements is a very
http://www.thing.net/~grist/ld/smith-fn.htm
Notes to
"Pre-Fluxus Conceptual Developments and Generative Influences"
Chapter 1 of Fluxus: The History Of An Attitude
by Owen F. Smith 1. For example, see Aldo Pellegrini, New Tendencies in Art (New York: Crown Publishers, 1966) and Irving Sandler, The Triumph of American Painting 2. For more information on the development of an aesthetic modernism, see Peter Burger, Theory of the Avant-Garde (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1984). 3. It is partly for this reason that some of the artistic developments in the fifties and early sixties, especially Fluxus and related developments, were often incorrectly referred to as Neo-Dada. (Frankfurt: Verlag C.J. Bucher, 1978) and Stewart Home, The Assault on Culture 5. This idea of two separate modernisms is discussed at length in Burger, Theory of the Avant-Garde, and in Matei Calinescu, Five Faces of Modernism (Durham: Duke University Press, 1987 [1977]). 7. For a discussion of this connection between the avant-garde (as separate from modernism) and the development of postmodernism, see John McGowan, Postmodernism and its Critics (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1991); Andreas Huyssen

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