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Thursday, February 9, 2017

Art of the Surrealist Period

By compounding elements from Cubism and the Dada Movement, Surrealists fabricated trickwork that was nonnatural to the world. The Dada Movement bring outd wile that ignored traditional aesthetics, because Dadaists preferent to showcase the opposite of what art stood for during the time. Like the Dadaists, Surrealists took bold sunrise(prenominal) ideas, in order to create groundbreaking art, still in a less crazy way. Surrealists rebelled against the constraints of the rational mind, and the oppressive rules of society. Psychologist Sigmund Freud is trustworthy for influencing the Surrealists with these ideas. His writings played a significant role in the Surrealists desire to produce the un conscious mind, through the inwardness of art. Freud and other psychoanalysts used a variety of techniques to bring frontwards their patients thoughts. In the Surrealist movement, artists took hold of many of these techniques to create their art, and emphasize their belief that on that point is creativity trapped in a persons self conscious, that is more real than art that is the product of conscious decision making and thought.\nSigmund Freud was a key figure in the development of analytic thinking. Freudian psychoanalysis has three components: the unconscious, free association, and coney unhiemlich (also known as the nonnatural). Freud believed that our unconscious was a place of birth for our repressed desires. Additionally, he believed in free association. This was a technique that Freud employed to allow his patients to collapse unconscious thoughts and feelings, that had been repressed or ignored. Consequently, when his patients became aware of these unconscious thoughts and feelings, they could in effect manage or tilt the problematic behaviors that werent already self-evident to them. Last but not least, Freud zeroed in on the concept of the uncanny. He analyze the complex relationship of the unfamiliar, within the familiar. All 3 of these el ements of Freudian psychoanalysis w...

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