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Surrealist techniques

Surrealism in art, poetry, and literature uses numerous techniques and games to provide inspiration. Many of these are said to free imagination by producing a creative process free of conscious control. The importance of the unconscious as a source of inspiration is central to the nature of surrealism.

The Surrealist movement has been a fractious one since its inception. The value and role of the various techniques has been one of many subjects of disagreement. Some Surrealists consider automatism and games to be sources of inspiration only, while others consider them starting points for finished works. Others consider the items created through automatism to be finished works themselves, needing no further refinement.

Aerography

 
Aerography was innovative media used by Man Ray in a series of paintings over the period from 1917 to 1919. "Seguidilla" (1919) is one of these pictures. Both conceptually and technically the airbrush painting method presented a new point of departure from a traditional way of painting. Ray recalled, "(…) It was thrilling to paint a picture, hardly touching the surface - a purely cerebral act, as it were."[1]

Aerography is a technique in which a 3-dimensional object is used as a stencil with spraypainting.

Automatism

Automatism was used in different ways for each art :

  • Automatic drawing
  • Automatic painting
  • Automatic writing
  • Automatic poetry is poetry written using the automatic method. It has probably been the chief surrealist method from the founding of surrealism to the present day. One of the oddest uses of automatic writing by a great writer was that of W. B. Yeats ; his wife, a spiritualist, practised it, and Yeats put large chunks of it into his prose work, A Vision and much of his later poetry, but Yeats was not a surrealist. In French surrealism, André Breton and Philippe Soupault were often considered as the pioneers of this technique with their collection Les Champs magnétiques (1919), who claimed to be the first collection only written through the automatic method : but recent studies[2] have proven the manuscripts showed many variants and corrections throughout the poems.

The Czech writer Bohumil Hrabal used the method of automatic text in his famous book I Served the King of England. One chapter in the book is written as a single sentence, and at the end of the book Hrabal endorses the use of automatic writing.

Bulletism

Bulletism is shooting ink at a blank piece of paper. The artist can then develop images based on what is seen.

Calligramme

 
Calligramme "La cravate et la montre" (1914), by Guillaume Apollinaire, is an example of typographical poetry with the visual depiction of a tie and a watch. The pictorial effect of writing is an invitation to simultaneously process both the visual and verbal aspects of the poem. Designed to be read in a single glance, the text and image are integrated within the reader’s perceptual experience.[3]

A calligramme is a text or poem of a type developed by Guillaume Apollinaire in which the words or letters make up a shape, particularly a shape connected to the subject of the text or poem.[4][5]

Collage

 
Collage “Merz-drawing 85, Zig-Zag Red” (1920), by Kurt Schwitters, composed with the fragments of scraps and torn papers clinching over the canvas. Tearing papers can suggest an act of artistic experience, connoting an emotional or creative crisis.[6]

Collage is the assemblage of different forms creating a new whole. For example, an artistic collage work may include newspaper clippings, ribbons, bits of colored or hand-made papers, photographs, etc., glued to a solid support or canvas.

Coulage

A coulage is a kind of automatic or involuntary sculpture made by pouring a molten material (such as metal, wax, chocolate or white chocolate) into cold water. As the material cools it takes on what appears to be a random (or aleatoric) form, though the physical properties of the materials involved may lead to a conglomeration of discs or spheres. The artist may use a variety of techniques to affect the outcome.

This technique is also used in the divination process known as ceromancy.

Cubomania

Cubomania is a method of making collages in which a picture or image is cut into squares and the squares are then reassembled without regard for the image. The technique was first used by the Romanian surrealist Gherasim Luca.

Cut-up technique

Cut-up technique is a literary form or method in which a text is cut up at random and rearranged to create a new text.

Decalcomania

Decalcomania is a process of spreading thick paint upon a canvas then—while it is still wet—covering it with further material such as paper or aluminium foil. This covering is then removed (again before the paint dries), and the resultant paint pattern becomes the basis of the finished painting. The technique was much employed by artists such as Max Ernst.

Dream résumé

The dream résumé takes the form of an employment résumé but chronicles its subject's achievements, employment, or the like, in dreams, rather than in waking life. Sometimes dream résumés contain the achievements of both, however.

Echo poem

An echo poem is a poem written using a technique invented by Aurélien Dauguet in 1972. The poem is composed by one or more persons, working together in a process as follows.

The first "stanza" of the poem is written on the left-hand column of a piece of paper divided into two columns. Then the "opposite", or 'echo', of the first stanza, in whatever sense is appropriate to the poem, is composed in the right-hand column of the page. The writing is done automatically and often the "opposite" stanza is composed of a phonetic correspondence to the first stanza.

For a longer work, the third stanza can then begin in the left-hand column as an "opposite" or a phonetic correspondence to what preceded it in the right-hand column. Then the fourth stanza might be an "opposite" or sound correspondence to what preceded it in the left-hand column, and so forth. When the poem is completed, the echo of the last phrase, line, or sentence, generally serves as the title.

This is unrelated to the non-Surrealist echo verse form which appears as a dialogue between the questions of a character and the answers of the nymph Echo.[7]

Éclaboussure

Éclaboussure is a process in Surrealist painting where oil paints or watercolours are laid down and water or turpentine is splattered, then soaked up to reveal random splatters or dots where the media was removed. This technique gives the appearance of space and atmosphere. It was used in paintings by Remedios Varo.

Entopic graphomania

 
Entopic graphomania, from the book "Vision Dans le Cristal" (1945) by Dolfi Trost. Connecting the dots or scratches is drawing technique that aims to stimulate creative process and subconscious associations. Trost believed in transformation of human consciousness through a dialectical process that can lead to a modification of human existence at both the personal and social level.[8]

Entopic graphomania[9] is a surrealist and automatic method of drawing in which dots are made at the sites of impurities in a blank sheet of paper, and lines are then made between the dots; these can be either "curved lines... or straight lines.".[10] Ithell Colquhoun described its results as "the most austere kind of geometric abstraction."[10] It is to be distinguished from "entoptic" methods of drawing or art-making, inspired by entoptic phenomena.[11]

The method was invented by Dolfi Trost, who as the subtitle of his 1945 book ("Vision dans le cristal. Oniromancie obsessionelle. Et neuf graphomanies entopiques") suggests, included nine examples therein.[12] This method of "indecipherable writing" (see below) was supposedly an example of "surautomatism", the controversial theory put forward by Trost and Gherashim Luca in which surrealist methods would be practiced that "went beyond" automatism. In Dialectique de Dialectique they had proposed the further radicalization of surrealist automatism by abandoning images produced by artistic techniques in favour of those "resulting from rigorously applied scientific procedures," allegedly cutting the notion of "artist" out of the process of creating images and replacing it with chance and scientific rigour. However, the question has arisen whether an algorithm should be used to determine in what order to connect the dots to maintain the "automatic" nature of the method.[13]

The method has been compared to the "voronoi mathematical progression".[14]

Étrécissements

Collage is perceived as an additive method of visual poetry whereas Étrécissements are a reductive method. This was first employed by Marcel Mariën in the 1950s. The results are achieved by the cutting away of parts of images to encourage a new image, by means of a pair of scissors or any other manipulative sharpened instrument.

Exquisite corpse

Exquisite corpse or Cadavre exquis is a method by which a collection of words or images are collectively assembled. It is based on an old parlour game known by the same name (and also as Consequences) in which players wrote in turn on a sheet of paper, folded it to conceal part of the writing, and then passed it to the next player for a further contribution.

Frottage

Frottage is a method of creation in which one takes a pencil or other drawing tool and makes a "rubbing" over a textured surface. The drawing can either be left as it is or used as the basis for further refinement.

Fumage

 
Wolfgang Paalen, Fumage, 1938, Candle smoke on paper

Fumage is a technique in which impressions are made by the smoke of a candle or kerosene lamp on a piece of paper or canvas. This technique was introduced by Wolfgang Paalen.

Games

In Surrealism, games are important not only as a form of recreation but as a method of investigation. The intention is to cut away the constraints of rationalism and allow concepts to develop more freely and in a more random manner. The aim is to break traditional thought patterns and create a more original outcome.

Old games such as Exquisite corpse, and newer ones, notably Time Travelers' Potlatch and Parallel Collage, have played a critical role.

Exquisite corpse is a method by which a collection of words or images are collectively assembled, the result being known as the exquisite corpse or cadavre exquis in French. Later the game was adapted to drawing and collage.

Time Travelers' Potlatch is a game in which two or more players say what gift they would give to another person - this is usually an historical person who played a role in, or had an influence on, the formation of Surrealism.

Grattage

Grattage is a surrealist technique in painting in which (usually wet) paint is scraped off the canvas. It was employed by Max Ernst and Joan Miró.[15]

Heatage

Heatage is an automatic technique developed and used by David Hare in which an exposed but unfixed photographic negative is heated from below, causing the emulsion (and the resulting image, when developed) to distort in a random fashion.

Indecipherable writing

In addition to its obvious meaning of writing that is illegibile or for whatever other reason cannot be made out by the reader, indecipherable writing refers to a set of automatic techniques, most developed by Romanian surrealists and falling under the heading of surautomatism. Examples include entoptic graphomania, fumage and the movement of liquid down a vertical surface.

Involuntary sculpture

Surrealism describes as "involuntary sculpture" those made by absent-mindedly manipulating something, such as rolling and unrolling a movie ticket, bending a paper clip, and so forth.[16]

Latent news

Latent news is a game in which an article from a newspaper is cut into individual words (or perhaps phrases) and then rapidly reassembled; see also Cut-up technique.

Movement of liquid down a vertical surface

The movement of liquid down a vertical surface is, as the name suggests, a technique, invented by surrealists from Romania and said by them to be surautomatic and a form of indecipherable writing, of making pictures by dripping or allowing a flow of some form of liquid down a vertical surface.

Paranoiac-critical method

Paranoiac-critical method is a technique invented by Salvador Dalí which consists of the artist invoking a paranoid state (fear that the self is being manipulated, targeted or controlled by others). The result is a deconstruction of the psychological concept of identity, such that subjectivity becomes the primary aspect of the artwork.

Parsemage

Parsemage is a surrealist and automatic method in the visual arts invented by Ithell Colquhoun in which dust from charcoal or colored chalk is scattered on the surface of water and then skimmed off by passing a stiff paper or cardboard just under the water's surface.

Photomontage

Photomontage is making of composite picture by cutting and joining a number of photographs.

Sifflage

Sifflage is the technique used by Jimmy Ernst in which liquid paint is blown to inspire or reveal an image.[17][18] This is sometimes called "soufflage",[19][20][21] but Ernst's name was "sifflage".[21] The result can be seen in his Echo Plasm.[18]

Surautomatism

Surautomatism is any theory or act of taking automatism to its most absurd limits.

Triptography

Triptography is an automatic photographic technique whereby a roll of film is used three times (either by the same photographer or, in the spirit of Exquisite Corpse, three different photographers), causing it to be triple-exposed in such a way that the chances of any single photograph having a clear and definite subject is nearly impossible. Indeed, finding any edges on the negative itself during the developing process is a nearly impossible task. Typically the developing of such a roll of film is an exercise in automatic technique in and of itself, cutting the film by counting sprocket holes alone, with no regard for the images present on the negative. The results have a quality reminiscent of the transitory period in sleep when one dream suddenly becomes another.

Creativist Christopher Thurlow claims to have discovered this technique when his urge to continue taking photographs was suddenly challenged by the fact that he had run out of un-exposed film.

See also

References

  1. ^ Di Donna, Emmanuel; Sebline, Edouard (2019). ENIGMA & DESIRE: MAN RAY PAINTINGS. Di Donna Gallery. pp. 70–75. ISBN 978-1-7337640-1-8.
  2. ^ Parent, Stéphanie (2001). "" Le manuscrit des "Champs magnétiques" d'André Breton et Philippe Soupault: le paradoxe de l'écriture automatique. "" (PDF). Centre de recherche sur le texte et l'imaginaire. coll. Figura. 4: 139–148.
  3. ^ Shingler, Katherine (2011). "Perceiving Text and Image in Apollinaire's Calligrammes". Paragraph. Edinburgh University Press. 34 (1): 66–85. JSTOR 43263771.
  4. ^ "Examples of calligrammes".
  5. ^ "Modern examples and make your own" (Flash).
  6. ^ Craft, Catherine (2012). "Cut, Tear, Scrape, Erase". Master Drawings. Master Drawings Association. 50 (2): 161–186. JSTOR 41703376.
  7. ^ Brotchie, Alistair. A Book of Surrealist Games. p. 30.
  8. ^ Finkenthal, Michael (2015). "Trost's Journey from Reality as a Dream to the Dream as Reality". Dada/Surrealism. Johns Hopkins University. 20 (14): 1–21. doi:10.17077/0084-9537.1303.
  9. ^ Matthew, Henry Colin Gray; Harrison, Brian Howard (2004). Oxford dictionary of national biography: in association with the British Academy: from the earliest times to the year 2000. Oxford University Press. pp. 786-. ISBN 978-0-19-861362-6.
  10. ^ a b "Automatic Techniques". Retrieved 2008-06-21.
  11. ^ Carr, Suzanne. "Entoptic phenomena". Retrieved 2007-10-03.
  12. ^ Prügel, Roland (2008). (Google Books). ISBN 9783412164065.
  13. ^ Conroy, Matthew. "Comment on "The Olmec Bride with the Saturated Eyebrows Bemoans the Inconvenience of Love"".
  14. ^ "entopic graphomania".
  15. ^ "Joan Miró". Galeria d'Antiretrats.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-09-29. Retrieved 2007-10-25.
  17. ^ Hadler, Mona (2011). "Ernst, Jimmy". In Marter, Joan M. (ed.). The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. p. 166. ISBN 978-0-19533579-8.
  18. ^ a b Hadler, Mona (1995). "Jazz and the New York School". In Gabbard, Krin (ed.). Representing jazz. Duke University Press. p. 251. ISBN 0822315947. Retrieved 2019-07-08. [1]
  19. ^ "Examples of surrealist techniques used by other artists". 2012.
  20. ^ "(unknown)". {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  21. ^ a b Hadler, Mona (2018-02-19). "William T. Williams" (PDF). BOMB. The Oral History Project. p. 60. Retrieved 2019-07-08. MH Did he talk to you about what he called sifflage? Well his father used frottage, or rubbing. Soufflage was blowing. Jimmy would blow on the paint, and he said it was like jazz musicians blowing the blues. WTW Oh yes. I know these pictures (laughter)

External links

  • "0000000 (outgraph)" by applenoire on Flickr
  • Experimental Gameplay Website has several rather surreal games, such as "On a rainy day."
  • Shadoikus Surrealist haikus.
  • Language Is A Virus Surrealist games: exquisite corpse, cut-up machines, word games and creative inspirations.
  • Examples of the Time Travellers' Potlatch

surrealist, techniques, surrealism, poetry, literature, uses, numerous, techniques, games, provide, inspiration, many, these, said, free, imagination, producing, creative, process, free, conscious, control, importance, unconscious, source, inspiration, central. Surrealism in art poetry and literature uses numerous techniques and games to provide inspiration Many of these are said to free imagination by producing a creative process free of conscious control The importance of the unconscious as a source of inspiration is central to the nature of surrealism The Surrealist movement has been a fractious one since its inception The value and role of the various techniques has been one of many subjects of disagreement Some Surrealists consider automatism and games to be sources of inspiration only while others consider them starting points for finished works Others consider the items created through automatism to be finished works themselves needing no further refinement Contents 1 Aerography 2 Automatism 3 Bulletism 4 Calligramme 5 Collage 6 Coulage 7 Cubomania 8 Cut up technique 9 Decalcomania 10 Dream resume 11 Echo poem 12 Eclaboussure 13 Entopic graphomania 14 Etrecissements 15 Exquisite corpse 16 Frottage 17 Fumage 18 Games 19 Grattage 20 Heatage 21 Indecipherable writing 22 Involuntary sculpture 23 Latent news 24 Movement of liquid down a vertical surface 25 Paranoiac critical method 26 Parsemage 27 Photomontage 28 Sifflage 29 Surautomatism 30 Triptography 31 See also 32 References 33 External linksAerography Edit Aerography was innovative media used by Man Ray in a series of paintings over the period from 1917 to 1919 Seguidilla 1919 is one of these pictures Both conceptually and technically the airbrush painting method presented a new point of departure from a traditional way of painting Ray recalled It was thrilling to paint a picture hardly touching the surface a purely cerebral act as it were 1 Main article Aerography arts Aerography is a technique in which a 3 dimensional object is used as a stencil with spraypainting Automatism EditMain article Surrealist automatismAutomatism was used in different ways for each art Automatic drawing Automatic painting Automatic writing Automatic poetry is poetry written using the automatic method It has probably been the chief surrealist method from the founding of surrealism to the present day One of the oddest uses of automatic writing by a great writer was that of W B Yeats his wife a spiritualist practised it and Yeats put large chunks of it into his prose work A Vision and much of his later poetry but Yeats was not a surrealist In French surrealism Andre Breton and Philippe Soupault were often considered as the pioneers of this technique with their collection Les Champs magnetiques 1919 who claimed to be the first collection only written through the automatic method but recent studies 2 have proven the manuscripts showed many variants and corrections throughout the poems The Czech writer Bohumil Hrabal used the method of automatic text in his famous book I Served the King of England One chapter in the book is written as a single sentence and at the end of the book Hrabal endorses the use of automatic writing Bulletism EditMain article Bulletism Bulletism is shooting ink at a blank piece of paper The artist can then develop images based on what is seen Calligramme Edit Calligramme La cravate et la montre 1914 by Guillaume Apollinaire is an example of typographical poetry with the visual depiction of a tie and a watch The pictorial effect of writing is an invitation to simultaneously process both the visual and verbal aspects of the poem Designed to be read in a single glance the text and image are integrated within the reader s perceptual experience 3 A calligramme is a text or poem of a type developed by Guillaume Apollinaire in which the words or letters make up a shape particularly a shape connected to the subject of the text or poem 4 5 Collage Edit Collage Merz drawing 85 Zig Zag Red 1920 by Kurt Schwitters composed with the fragments of scraps and torn papers clinching over the canvas Tearing papers can suggest an act of artistic experience connoting an emotional or creative crisis 6 Main article Collage Collage is the assemblage of different forms creating a new whole For example an artistic collage work may include newspaper clippings ribbons bits of colored or hand made papers photographs etc glued to a solid support or canvas Coulage EditA coulage is a kind of automatic or involuntary sculpture made by pouring a molten material such as metal wax chocolate or white chocolate into cold water As the material cools it takes on what appears to be a random or aleatoric form though the physical properties of the materials involved may lead to a conglomeration of discs or spheres The artist may use a variety of techniques to affect the outcome This technique is also used in the divination process known as ceromancy Cubomania EditMain article Cubomania Cubomania is a method of making collages in which a picture or image is cut into squares and the squares are then reassembled without regard for the image The technique was first used by the Romanian surrealist Gherasim Luca Cut up technique EditMain article Cut up technique Cut up technique is a literary form or method in which a text is cut up at random and rearranged to create a new text Decalcomania EditMain article Decalcomania Decalcomania is a process of spreading thick paint upon a canvas then while it is still wet covering it with further material such as paper or aluminium foil This covering is then removed again before the paint dries and the resultant paint pattern becomes the basis of the finished painting The technique was much employed by artists such as Max Ernst Dream resume EditThe dream resume takes the form of an employment resume but chronicles its subject s achievements employment or the like in dreams rather than in waking life Sometimes dream resumes contain the achievements of both however Echo poem EditAn echo poem is a poem written using a technique invented by Aurelien Dauguet in 1972 The poem is composed by one or more persons working together in a process as follows The first stanza of the poem is written on the left hand column of a piece of paper divided into two columns Then the opposite or echo of the first stanza in whatever sense is appropriate to the poem is composed in the right hand column of the page The writing is done automatically and often the opposite stanza is composed of a phonetic correspondence to the first stanza For a longer work the third stanza can then begin in the left hand column as an opposite or a phonetic correspondence to what preceded it in the right hand column Then the fourth stanza might be an opposite or sound correspondence to what preceded it in the left hand column and so forth When the poem is completed the echo of the last phrase line or sentence generally serves as the title This is unrelated to the non Surrealist echo verse form which appears as a dialogue between the questions of a character and the answers of the nymph Echo 7 Eclaboussure EditEclaboussure is a process in Surrealist painting where oil paints or watercolours are laid down and water or turpentine is splattered then soaked up to reveal random splatters or dots where the media was removed This technique gives the appearance of space and atmosphere It was used in paintings by Remedios Varo Entopic graphomania Edit Entopic graphomania from the book Vision Dans le Cristal 1945 by Dolfi Trost Connecting the dots or scratches is drawing technique that aims to stimulate creative process and subconscious associations Trost believed in transformation of human consciousness through a dialectical process that can lead to a modification of human existence at both the personal and social level 8 Entopic graphomania 9 is a surrealist and automatic method of drawing in which dots are made at the sites of impurities in a blank sheet of paper and lines are then made between the dots these can be either curved lines or straight lines 10 Ithell Colquhoun described its results as the most austere kind of geometric abstraction 10 It is to be distinguished from entoptic methods of drawing or art making inspired by entoptic phenomena 11 The method was invented by Dolfi Trost who as the subtitle of his 1945 book Vision dans le cristal Oniromancie obsessionelle Et neuf graphomanies entopiques suggests included nine examples therein 12 This method of indecipherable writing see below was supposedly an example of surautomatism the controversial theory put forward by Trost and Gherashim Luca in which surrealist methods would be practiced that went beyond automatism In Dialectique de Dialectique they had proposed the further radicalization of surrealist automatism by abandoning images produced by artistic techniques in favour of those resulting from rigorously applied scientific procedures allegedly cutting the notion of artist out of the process of creating images and replacing it with chance and scientific rigour However the question has arisen whether an algorithm should be used to determine in what order to connect the dots to maintain the automatic nature of the method 13 The method has been compared to the voronoi mathematical progression 14 Etrecissements EditCollage is perceived as an additive method of visual poetry whereas Etrecissements are a reductive method This was first employed by Marcel Marien in the 1950s The results are achieved by the cutting away of parts of images to encourage a new image by means of a pair of scissors or any other manipulative sharpened instrument Exquisite corpse EditMain article Exquisite corpse Exquisite corpse or Cadavre exquis is a method by which a collection of words or images are collectively assembled It is based on an old parlour game known by the same name and also as Consequences in which players wrote in turn on a sheet of paper folded it to conceal part of the writing and then passed it to the next player for a further contribution Frottage EditMain article Frottage surrealist technique Frottage is a method of creation in which one takes a pencil or other drawing tool and makes a rubbing over a textured surface The drawing can either be left as it is or used as the basis for further refinement Fumage EditMain article Fumage Wolfgang Paalen Fumage 1938 Candle smoke on paper Fumage is a technique in which impressions are made by the smoke of a candle or kerosene lamp on a piece of paper or canvas This technique was introduced by Wolfgang Paalen Games EditIn Surrealism games are important not only as a form of recreation but as a method of investigation The intention is to cut away the constraints of rationalism and allow concepts to develop more freely and in a more random manner The aim is to break traditional thought patterns and create a more original outcome Old games such as Exquisite corpse and newer ones notably Time Travelers Potlatch and Parallel Collage have played a critical role Exquisite corpse is a method by which a collection of words or images are collectively assembled the result being known as the exquisite corpse or cadavre exquis in French Later the game was adapted to drawing and collage Time Travelers Potlatch is a game in which two or more players say what gift they would give to another person this is usually an historical person who played a role in or had an influence on the formation of Surrealism Grattage EditGrattage is a surrealist technique in painting in which usually wet paint is scraped off the canvas It was employed by Max Ernst and Joan Miro 15 Heatage EditHeatage is an automatic technique developed and used by David Hare in which an exposed but unfixed photographic negative is heated from below causing the emulsion and the resulting image when developed to distort in a random fashion Indecipherable writing EditIn addition to its obvious meaning of writing that is illegibile or for whatever other reason cannot be made out by the reader indecipherable writing refers to a set of automatic techniques most developed by Romanian surrealists and falling under the heading of surautomatism Examples include entoptic graphomania fumage and the movement of liquid down a vertical surface Involuntary sculpture EditSurrealism describes as involuntary sculpture those made by absent mindedly manipulating something such as rolling and unrolling a movie ticket bending a paper clip and so forth 16 Latent news EditLatent news is a game in which an article from a newspaper is cut into individual words or perhaps phrases and then rapidly reassembled see also Cut up technique Movement of liquid down a vertical surface EditThe movement of liquid down a vertical surface is as the name suggests a technique invented by surrealists from Romania and said by them to be surautomatic and a form of indecipherable writing of making pictures by dripping or allowing a flow of some form of liquid down a vertical surface Paranoiac critical method EditMain article Paranoiac critical method Paranoiac critical method is a technique invented by Salvador Dali which consists of the artist invoking a paranoid state fear that the self is being manipulated targeted or controlled by others The result is a deconstruction of the psychological concept of identity such that subjectivity becomes the primary aspect of the artwork Parsemage EditParsemage is a surrealist and automatic method in the visual arts invented by Ithell Colquhoun in which dust from charcoal or colored chalk is scattered on the surface of water and then skimmed off by passing a stiff paper or cardboard just under the water s surface Photomontage EditMain article Photomontage Photomontage is making of composite picture by cutting and joining a number of photographs Sifflage EditSifflage is the technique used by Jimmy Ernst in which liquid paint is blown to inspire or reveal an image 17 18 This is sometimes called soufflage 19 20 21 but Ernst s name was sifflage 21 The result can be seen in his Echo Plasm 18 Surautomatism EditMain article Surautomatism Surautomatism is any theory or act of taking automatism to its most absurd limits Triptography EditTriptography is an automatic photographic technique whereby a roll of film is used three times either by the same photographer or in the spirit of Exquisite Corpse three different photographers causing it to be triple exposed in such a way that the chances of any single photograph having a clear and definite subject is nearly impossible Indeed finding any edges on the negative itself during the developing process is a nearly impossible task Typically the developing of such a roll of film is an exercise in automatic technique in and of itself cutting the film by counting sprocket holes alone with no regard for the images present on the negative The results have a quality reminiscent of the transitory period in sleep when one dream suddenly becomes another Creativist Christopher Thurlow claims to have discovered this technique when his urge to continue taking photographs was suddenly challenged by the fact that he had run out of un exposed film See also EditCreativity techniquesReferences Edit Di Donna Emmanuel Sebline Edouard 2019 ENIGMA amp DESIRE MAN RAY PAINTINGS Di Donna Gallery pp 70 75 ISBN 978 1 7337640 1 8 Parent Stephanie 2001 Le manuscrit des Champs magnetiques d Andre Breton et Philippe Soupault le paradoxe de l ecriture automatique PDF Centre de recherche sur le texte et l imaginaire coll Figura 4 139 148 Shingler Katherine 2011 Perceiving Text and Image in Apollinaire s Calligrammes Paragraph Edinburgh University Press 34 1 66 85 JSTOR 43263771 Examples of calligrammes Modern examples and make your own Flash Craft Catherine 2012 Cut Tear Scrape Erase Master Drawings Master Drawings Association 50 2 161 186 JSTOR 41703376 Brotchie Alistair A Book of Surrealist Games p 30 Finkenthal Michael 2015 Trost s Journey from Reality as a Dream to the Dream as Reality Dada Surrealism Johns Hopkins University 20 14 1 21 doi 10 17077 0084 9537 1303 Matthew Henry Colin Gray Harrison Brian Howard 2004 Oxford dictionary of national biography in association with the British Academy from the earliest times to the year 2000 Oxford University Press pp 786 ISBN 978 0 19 861362 6 a b Automatic Techniques Retrieved 2008 06 21 Carr Suzanne Entoptic phenomena Retrieved 2007 10 03 Prugel Roland 2008 Google Books ISBN 9783412164065 Conroy Matthew Comment on The Olmec Bride with the Saturated Eyebrows Bemoans the Inconvenience of Love entopic graphomania Joan Miro Galeria d Antiretrats Involuntary Sculpture Archived from the original on 2006 09 29 Retrieved 2007 10 25 Hadler Mona 2011 Ernst Jimmy In Marter Joan M ed The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art Vol 1 Oxford University Press p 166 ISBN 978 0 19533579 8 a b Hadler Mona 1995 Jazz and the New York School In Gabbard Krin ed Representing jazz Duke University Press p 251 ISBN 0822315947 Retrieved 2019 07 08 1 Examples of surrealist techniques used by other artists 2012 unknown a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Cite uses generic title help a b Hadler Mona 2018 02 19 William T Williams PDF BOMB The Oral History Project p 60 Retrieved 2019 07 08 MH Did he talk to you about what he called sifflage Well his father used frottage or rubbing Soufflage was blowing Jimmy would blow on the paint and he said it was like jazz musicians blowing the blues WTW Oh yes I know these pictures laughter External links Edit Look up echo poem in Wiktionary the free dictionary 0000000 outgraph by applenoire on Flickr Experimental Gameplay Website has several rather surreal games such as On a rainy day Shadoikus Surrealist haikus Language Is A Virus Surrealist games exquisite corpse cut up machines word games and creative inspirations Examples of the Time Travellers Potlatch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Surrealist techniques amp oldid 1130336409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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