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Rene Magritte




René François Ghislain Magritte ( November 21 , 1898August 15 , 1967 ) was a Belgian Surrealist artist. He is well known for a number of witty and amusing images.


LIFE


Magritte was born in Lessines , Belgium in 1898. In 1912 , his mother committed suicide by Drowning herself in the River Sambre . He studied at the Académie Royale Des Beaux-Arts in Brussels for two years until 1918 . During this time he met Georgette Berger , whom he married in 1922 .

Magritte worked in a wallpaper factory, and was a poster and advertisement designer until 1926 when a contract with Galerie la Centaure in Brussels made it possible for him to paint full-time.

In 1926 , Magritte produced his first Surrealist painting, ''The Lost Jockey (Le jockey perdu)'', and held his first exhibition in Brussels in 1927 . Critics heaped abuse on the exhibition. Depressed by the failure, he moved to Paris where he became friends with André Breton , and became involved in the Surrealist group.

When Galerie la Centaure closed and the contract income ended, he returned to Brussels and worked in advertising. Then, with his brother, he formed an agency, which earned him a living wage.

During the of Belgium in World War II he remained in Brussels, which led to a break with Breton. At the time he renounced the violence and pessimism of his earlier work, though he returned to the themes later.

His work showed in the United States in New York in 1936 and again in that city in two retrospective exhibitions, one at the Museum Of Modern Art in 1965 , and the other at the Metropolitan Museum Of Art in 1992 .

Magritte died of cancer on August 15 , 1967 and was interred in Schaarbeek Cemetery , Brussels.
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PHILOSOPHICAL AND ARTISTIC GESTURES


A consummate technician, his work frequently displays a juxtaposition of ordinary objects, or an unusual context, giving new meanings to familiar things. The representational use of objects as other than what they seem is typified in his painting, ''The Treachery Of Images (La trahison des images)'', which shows a Michel Foucault discusses the painting and its paradox.)

Note that Magritte pulled the same "stunt" in a painting of an apple: he painted the fruit realistically and then used an "internal" caption or framing device to deny that the item was an apple. It might be true that Magritte's point in these "Ceci n'est" works is that no matter how closely, through realism-art, we come to depicting an item accurately, we never do catch the item itself, per se, as a Kantian noumenon, but capture only an image on the canvas. But that interpretation trivializes Magritte's insight -- for it is true of any painting, and every artist and child would admit it, that what the painting does is only present an image of a thing, and the thing itself is not on or in the canvas. Unless we glued a pipe to the canvas! It might be more plausible to interpret Magritte as commenting on Freudian psychoanalysis -- a topic not very far removed from many of his surrealistic works, anyway. Sigmund Freud , especially in his dream analysis, continually asserted that what clearly and obviously seemed to be an X in a dream was not really an X, that it was an X only patently, on the surface, but not latently or deeply, that the X in the dream represented or was a metaphor for some other thing, Y. The dream-image train is really a penis, for example. So when Magritte says "This is not a pipe," what he means is that it may be possible to think that it is only an image that stands for something else, that the phenomenal reality of the pipe obscures or hides the true reality lying underneath. Again, maybe a penis. The difficult question, if we go this far, is whether Magritte intended to provide support for or to illustrate sympathetically Freudian dream analysis -- the treachery of dreams -- or, instead, was mocking it: "You mean this image, which is obviously a pipe-image, is not really a pipe-image? Tell me another!"

His art shows a more representational style of surrealism compared to the "automatic" style seen in works by artists like Joan Miró . In addition to fantastic elements, his work is often witty and amusing. He also created a number of surrealist versions of other famous paintings.

René Magritte described his paintings saying,
My painting is visible images which conceal nothing; they evoke mystery and, indeed, when one sees one of my pictures, one asks oneself this simple question, 'What does that mean?'. It does not mean anything, because mystery means nothing either, it is unknowable.



SELECTED LIST OF WORKS

  • 1920 ''Landscape''

  • 1922 ''The Station''

  • 1923 ''Sixth Nocturne''

  • 1925 ''The Bather'' and ''The Window''

  • 1926 ''The Lost Jockey (1926)'', ''The Mind of the Traveler'', ''Sensational News'', ''The Difficult Crossing'', ''The Vestal's Agony'', ''The Midnight Marriage'' and ''The Encounter''

  • 1927 ''The Murderer Threatened'', ''The Man from the Sea'', ''The Tiredness of Life'', ''The Light-breaker'', ''A Passion for Light'' and ''The Muscles of the Sky''

  • 1928 ''The Lining of Sleep'', ''Intermission'', ''The Flowers of the Abyss'', ''Discovery'', ''The Lovers'', ''The Daring Sleeper'', ''The Acrobat’s Ideas'', ''The Automaton'', ''The Empty Mask'' and ''Attempting the Impossible''

  • 1929 ''The Treachery of Images'', ''Threatening Weather'' and '' On The Threshold Of Liberty ''

  • 1930 ''Pink Belles, Tattered Skies'', ''The Eternally Obvious'', ''The Lifeline'', ''The Annunciation'' and ''Celestial Perfections''

  • 1931 ''The Voice of the Air'', ''Summer'' and ''The Giantess''

  • 1932 ''The Universe Unmasked''

  • 1933 ''The Human Condition'' and ''The Unexpected Answer''

  • 1934 ''The Rape''

  • 1935 ''The Discovery of Fire'', ''The Human Condition'', ''Revolution'', ''Perpetual Motion'', ''Collective Invention''', ''The False Mirror'' and ''The Portrait''

  • 1936 ''Clairvoyance'', ''The Healer'', ''The Philosopher’s Lamp'', ''Spiritual Exercises'' and ''Forbidden Literature''

  • 1937 ''The Future of Statues'' and ''The Black Flag''

  • 1938 ''Time Transfixed'' and ''Steps of Summer''

  • 1939 ''Victory''

  • 1940 ''The Return'', ''The Wedding Breakfast''

  • 1941 ''The Break in the Clouds''

  • 1942 ''Misses de L’Isle Adam'' and ''The Misanthropes''

  • 1943 ''Universal Gravitation'' and ''Monsieur Ingres’s Good Days''

  • 1944 ? ''The Domain of Amheim''

  • 1945 ''Treasure Island'' and ''Black Magic''

  • 1947 ''The Cicerone'', ''The Liberator'', ''The Fair Captive'' and ''The Red Model''

  • 1948 ''Blood Will Tell'', ''Memory'', ''The Mountain Dweller'', ''The Art of Life'', ''The Pebble'', '' The Lost Jockey (1948)'' and ''Famine''

  • 1949 ''Megalomania'', ''Elementary Cosmogany'' and ''Perspective, the Balcony''

  • 1950 ''Making an Entrance'', ''The Legend of the Centuries'', ''Towards Pleasure'', ''The Labors of Alexander'' and ''The Art of Conversation''

  • 1951 ''David’s Madame Récamier'', ''The Song of the Violet'', ''The Spring Tide'' and ''The Smile''

  • 1952 ''Personal Values''

  • 1953 '' Golconda '', ''The Listening Room'' and a fresco for the Knokke Casino

  • 1954 ''The Invisible World'' and ''The Empire of Light''

  • 1955 ''Memory of a Journey'' and ''The Mysteries of the Horizon''

  • 1956 ''The Sixteenth of September''

  • 1957 ''The Fountain of Youth''

  • 1958 ''The Golden Legend''

  • 1959 ''The Castle in the Pyrenees'', ''The Battle of the Argonne'', ''The Anniversary'' and ''The Glass Key''

  • 1960 ''The Memoirs of a Saint''

  • 1962 ''The Great Table'', ''The Healer'', '''Waste of Effort'' and ''Mona Lisa'' (circa 1962)

  • 1963 ''The Great Family'', ''The Open Air'', ''The Beautiful Season'', ''Princes of the Autumn'' and ''Young Love''

  • 1964 ''Evening Falls'', ''The Great War'', '' The Son Of Man '' and ''Song of Love''

  • 1965 ''Carte Blanche'' and ''Ages Ago''

  • 1966 ''The Shades'', ''The Happy Donor'', ''The Gold Ring'', ''The Pleasant Truth'' and ''The Mysteries of the Horizon''

  • 1967 ''Good Connections'', ''The Art of Living'' and several bronze sculptures based on Magritte’s previous works.



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