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Pipe Dreams

February 15, 2021 Martha Lattie
magritte.jpg

The Treachery of Images by Rene Magritte.

Surrealist Magritte has written "This is not a pipe" underneath an image of a pipe. His point is to remind the viewer that although you might be tempted to call this a pipe when you see it, is just a painting of a pipe.

In Artists, France Tags Rene Magritte, Magritte, Surrealism, Pipe
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Horizon

August 31, 2020 Martha Lattie
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Surrealist Landscape1990 - 1996 by George Morrison, The Minneapolis Institute of Art.

Morrison was born a Chippewa Native American who was then trained in the European/American style at the Art Students League in New York in the 1940's. The same place that turned out Jackson Pollock and many other Abstract Expressionists. His work shows these influences with a reverence for nature combined with a free-form style.

In Art History, Artists, USA Tags George Morrison, Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, The Art Students League, Jackson Pollock
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Understanding Symbols

June 19, 2020 Martha Lattie
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The Hunter (Catalan Landscape) by Joan Miro, 1923-24, MoMA, NYC.

Miro began his work as a painter doing portraits but soon found the work of artists like Picasso and the Surrealists with whom he socialized in Paris, to influence him to try other directions in his paintings. The Spanish Civil War drew his work into a political realm as his countrymen suffered at home. His career lasted well into the later part of the twentieth century, in fact a large tapestry he did for the World Trade Center was one of the most valuable pieces of art work that was destroyed on September 11, 2001. 

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Figure 6 by Joan Miro, 1974, The World Trade Center (destroyed 9/11/01).


In Art History, Artists Tags Joan Miro, Modernism, Pablo Picasso, Surrealism, The Museum of Modern Art, The National Gallery of Art, The Spanish Civil War, abstract, art history, art
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Brotherly Love

March 21, 2020 Martha Lattie
Portrait of My Dead Brother by Salvador Dali, 1963, The Salvador Dali Museum

Portrait of My Dead Brother by Salvador Dali, 1963, The Salvador Dali Museum

Dali never knew his bother who died of a stomach aliment at three years old, nine months before Salvador was born. Dali’s parents told him he was the reincarnation of his brother and he always felt they were like Castor and Pollux. From the Dali Museum: Dalí wrote a brief, elusive description of this work when it was first exhibited. “The Vulture, according to the Egyptians and Freud, represents my mother’s portrait. The cherries represent the molecules, the dark cherries create the visage of my dead brother, the sun-lighted cherries create the image of Salvador living thus repeating the great myth of the Dioscures Castor and Pollux.”

In Art History, Artists, Museums Tags salavador dali, dali, brother, Surrealism
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