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Surrealism and Magic

Enchanted Modernity
#SurrealismusBarberini

I believe in the future resolution of these two states, dream and reality, which are seemingly so contradictory, into a kind of absolute reality, a surreality, if one may so speak.

André Breton, “Manifesto of Surrealism”, 1924
Fantastic Worlds
Magic and Metamorphosis
First chapter
 In de Chirico’s painting  The Child’s Brain , the closed eyes of the naked man not only symbolize the world of dreams and fantasy, but also introspection and clairvoyance.

In de Chirico’s painting The Child’s Brain, the closed eyes of the naked man not only symbolize the world of dreams and fantasy, but also introspection and clairvoyance.

Magic was a stimulus to thinking. It freed man from fears, endowed him with a feeling of his power to control the world, sharpened his capacity to imagine, and kept awake his dreams of higher achievement.

Kurt Seligmann, “The Mirror of Magic”, 1948
 Max Ernst produced his magisterial work  Attirement of the Bride  as a tribute to his partner, the English Surrealist painter Leonora Carrington. He drew inspiration from traditional Renaissance depictions of witchcraft. As in a magical ritual, the naked seductress is being robed in a majestic feather cloak. As the core signifying color of magic, the luminous red associates its wearer with great magical power.

Max Ernst produced his magisterial work Attirement of the Bride as a tribute to his partner, the English Surrealist painter Leonora Carrington. He drew inspiration from traditional Renaissance depictions of witchcraft. As in a magical ritual, the naked seductress is being robed in a majestic feather cloak. As the core signifying color of magic, the luminous red associates its wearer with great magical power.

Learn more: Max Ernst – Attirement of the Bride
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Powerful Mother Goddess: Masson’s "Ophelia"
 Carrington associated the preparation of food with magical rites. Fittingly, the circular stone table here recalls a pagan altar. It is surrounded by a protective spell circle that Carrington has inscribed with magical signs. The white goose likely figures as a symbolic companion of the magically powerful “White Goddess” of Celtic mythology.

Carrington associated the preparation of food with magical rites. Fittingly, the circular stone table here recalls a pagan altar. It is surrounded by a protective spell circle that Carrington has inscribed with magical signs. The white goose likely figures as a symbolic companion of the magically powerful “White Goddess” of Celtic mythology.

Royal Wedding
Surrealism and Alchemy
Second chapter
 Victor Brauner’s  The Surrealist  builds on the iconography of the tarot – a  deck of cards that has been used for divinatory purposes since the 18th century. As a template he took the card “The Magician,” which symbolizes willpower and creativity. The four attributes of the figure (wand, coins, chalice and dagger) represent the alchemical power over the four elements and indicate that the magician is in possession of the elixir of life and thus also of immortality. 

Victor Brauner’s The Surrealist builds on the iconography of the tarot – a  deck of cards that has been used for divinatory purposes since the 18th century. As a template he took the card “The Magician,” which symbolizes willpower and creativity. The four attributes of the figure (wand, coins, chalice and dagger) represent the alchemical power over the four elements and indicate that the magician is in possession of the elixir of life and thus also of immortality. 

Learn more: Victor Brauner – The Surrealist
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 Brauner’s painting  The Lovers  was dedicated to André Breton and was a centerpiece of the International Surrealism Exhibition held in Paris in 1947. The show was entirely focused on themes of myth, magic, and alchemical regeneration.

Brauner’s painting The Lovers was dedicated to André Breton and was a centerpiece of the International Surrealism Exhibition held in Paris in 1947. The show was entirely focused on themes of myth, magic, and alchemical regeneration.

 Ernst’s 1944 sculpture  The King Playing with the Queen  can be read as a symbolic self-portrait in which Max Ernst “plays” with Dorothea Tanning as his alchemical queen. The motif also has erotic and sexual connotations.

Ernst’s 1944 sculpture The King Playing with the Queen can be read as a symbolic self-portrait in which Max Ernst “plays” with Dorothea Tanning as his alchemical queen. The motif also has erotic and sexual connotations.

 Leonora Carrington’s sorcerer, a necromancer, wants to bring to life the animal that is enclosed in a glass vessel to the right. The blue eggs symbolize rebirth and rejuvenation, the luminous butterflies transformation and metamorphosis.

Leonora Carrington’s sorcerer, a necromancer, wants to bring to life the animal that is enclosed in a glass vessel to the right. The blue eggs symbolize rebirth and rejuvenation, the luminous butterflies transformation and metamorphosis.

People speak with justice of the ‘magic of art’ and compare artists to magicians (…). There can be no doubt that art did not begin as art for art’s sake. It worked originally in the service of impulses which are for the most part extinct to-day. And among them we may suspect the presence of many magical purposes.

Sigmund Freud, “Totem and Taboo”, 1913
 In the 19th century, séances came into vogue: spiritualistic sessions in which so-called mediums supposedly entered into contact with the spirit world. Victor Brauner chose one of the most famous of these mediums, the Swiss Hélène Smith, as the embodiment of his “Siren of Knowledge.”
A Surrealist Tarot: The “Jeu de Marseille”
 Jacqueline Lamba, André Breton’s partner, was the only woman involved in the production of the  Jeu de Marseille . The artists were free to choose the materials and the motifs of the individual cards. In the traditional tarot, the wheel stands for Fortuna, the goddess of fate. Here, it acts as a symbol of revolutionary renewal.

Jacqueline Lamba, André Breton’s partner, was the only woman involved in the production of the Jeu de Marseille. The artists were free to choose the materials and the motifs of the individual cards. In the traditional tarot, the wheel stands for Fortuna, the goddess of fate. Here, it acts as a symbol of revolutionary renewal.

 The writings of Sigmund Freud were an important source of inspiration for Surrealism. Óscar Domínguez celebrated the psychoanalyst as the “magus of dream.” The rose and the pistol represent Eros and Thanatos, the love instinct and the death drive. The depiction of Freud’s body and his clothing contains numerous allusions to sexuality and desire.

The writings of Sigmund Freud were an important source of inspiration for Surrealism. Óscar Domínguez celebrated the psychoanalyst as the “magus of dream.” The rose and the pistol represent Eros and Thanatos, the love instinct and the death drive. The depiction of Freud’s body and his clothing contains numerous allusions to sexuality and desire.

 In the 19th century, séances came into vogue: spiritualistic sessions in which so-called mediums supposedly entered into contact with the spirit world. Victor Brauner chose one of the most famous of these mediums, the Swiss Hélène Smith, as the embodiment of his “Siren of Knowledge.”

In the 19th century, séances came into vogue: spiritualistic sessions in which so-called mediums supposedly entered into contact with the spirit world. Victor Brauner chose one of the most famous of these mediums, the Swiss Hélène Smith, as the embodiment of his “Siren of Knowledge.”

 The Surrealists were fascinated by 19th-century Symbolist poetry. The choice of Charles Baudelaire as the “Genius of Love” was probably influenced by the writings of André Breton. In his Manifesto of Surrealism (1924), he had hailed the French poet as a precursor of Surrealist literature.

The Surrealists were fascinated by 19th-century Symbolist poetry. The choice of Charles Baudelaire as the “Genius of Love” was probably influenced by the writings of André Breton. In his Manifesto of Surrealism (1924), he had hailed the French poet as a precursor of Surrealist literature.

Goddesses and Witches
Women as Magical Beings
Third chapter
 The female figures in Paul Delvaux’s  Break of Day  are hybrid beings: half tree trunk, half human. Their anchoring in the ground points to their magical connection to the realm of nature. Delvaux depicts the group as a round dance gathered around an altar-like object. The iconography is a nod to Albrecht Dürer’s 1497 engraving  The Four Witches .

The female figures in Paul Delvaux’s Break of Day are hybrid beings: half tree trunk, half human. Their anchoring in the ground points to their magical connection to the realm of nature. Delvaux depicts the group as a round dance gathered around an altar-like object. The iconography is a nod to Albrecht Dürer’s 1497 engraving The Four Witches.

Learn more: Paul Delvaux – Break of Day
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 In René Magritte’s painting  Black Magic , the nude woman’s body changes color from a realistic skin tone to a luminous blue. In this way, Magritte refers to her symbolic connection with the sky and the sea. The idealized figure is reminiscent of ancient statues of Venus, the goddess of love.

In René Magritte’s painting Black Magic, the nude woman’s body changes color from a realistic skin tone to a luminous blue. In this way, Magritte refers to her symbolic connection with the sky and the sea. The idealized figure is reminiscent of ancient statues of Venus, the goddess of love.

I wanted to lead the eye into spaces that hid, revealed, transformed all at once and where there would be some never-before-seen image, as it if happened with no help from me.

Dorothea Tanning, “Between Lives”, 2001
 The eerie atmosphere in Dorothea Tanning’s  The Guest Room  reminds us of her fascination with Gothic literature.

The eerie atmosphere in Dorothea Tanning’s The Guest Room reminds us of her fascination with Gothic literature.

 Dorothea Tanning’s fascination with children as protagonists in magical, fairy-tale events was intimately linked to her fascination with Lewis Carroll’s  Alice in Wonderland  (1865).

Dorothea Tanning’s fascination with children as protagonists in magical, fairy-tale events was intimately linked to her fascination with Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland (1865).

Occult Landscapes
The Magic of the Surreal
Fourth chapter
 In Surrealism, day and night stand for reality and dream, the real and the imaginary. Max Ernst’s painting suggests the resolution of these opposites in a higher reality or “surreality.” Through the magically luminous canvases, the brightness of day penetrates the nocturnal fantasy landscape.

In Surrealism, day and night stand for reality and dream, the real and the imaginary. Max Ernst’s painting suggests the resolution of these opposites in a higher reality or “surreality.” Through the magically luminous canvases, the brightness of day penetrates the nocturnal fantasy landscape.

Learn more: Max Ernst – Day and Night
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 In Wolfgang Paalen’s painting, the ghostly thunderstorm formations seem like an abstract representation of the “Wild Hunt”: fearsome spirits that, according to legend, ride on storm clouds at night. The sight of them was supposed to augur imminent war. The composition was executed in the same very year in which Hitler annexed Paalen’s Austrian homeland.

In Wolfgang Paalen’s painting, the ghostly thunderstorm formations seem like an abstract representation of the “Wild Hunt”: fearsome spirits that, according to legend, ride on storm clouds at night. The sight of them was supposed to augur imminent war. The composition was executed in the same very year in which Hitler annexed Paalen’s Austrian homeland.

 By the early 1940s, Roberto Matta had fled to the United States. With its garish color scheme and blazing flames,  Years of Fear  resembles a futuristic depiction of hell. The complex spatial design reflects Matta’s training as an architect. 

By the early 1940s, Roberto Matta had fled to the United States. With its garish color scheme and blazing flames, Years of Fear resembles a futuristic depiction of hell. The complex spatial design reflects Matta’s training as an architect. 

 In  Tomorrow Is Never , four imposing wooden scaffolds tower far above the clouds. Three of the complex lattice constructions are filled with huge linen cloths. The writhing fabrics seem like animate beings who are locked in a magical prison. The painting was created shortly after the death of Sage’s husband, the Surrealist painter Yves Tanguy. If the fabrics can be interpreted as shrouds and thus as symbols of death and transience, they also conjure up the idea of a ghostly haunting.

In Tomorrow Is Never, four imposing wooden scaffolds tower far above the clouds. Three of the complex lattice constructions are filled with huge linen cloths. The writhing fabrics seem like animate beings who are locked in a magical prison. The painting was created shortly after the death of Sage’s husband, the Surrealist painter Yves Tanguy. If the fabrics can be interpreted as shrouds and thus as symbols of death and transience, they also conjure up the idea of a ghostly haunting.

Learn more: Kay Sage – Tomorrow is Never
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 The title refers to the Merovingian king Dagobert whose bloodline, according to legend, was supernatural. In her painting Carrington combines stylistic borrowings from late medieval art with alchemical allusions to the power of the four elements. She executed the composition using the traditional tempera technique, in which pigments are mixed with egg yolk.

The title refers to the Merovingian king Dagobert whose bloodline, according to legend, was supernatural. In her painting Carrington combines stylistic borrowings from late medieval art with alchemical allusions to the power of the four elements. She executed the composition using the traditional tempera technique, in which pigments are mixed with egg yolk.

Everything tends to make us believe that there exists a certain point of the mind at which life and death, the real and the imagined, past and future, the communicable and the incommunicable, high and low, cease to be perceived as contradictions. Now, search as one may one will never find any other motivating force in the activity of the Surrealists than  the hope of finding and fixing this point.

André Breton, “Second Manifesto of Surrealism”, 1929