
Buying Paintings: Symbolism
Evoking a taste similar to the Romanticist tradition, but utilized mysticism and sensitivity through mythology and dream imagery, preceding the psychoanalytical work of Freud and Jung. With a strong philosophical touch, more so than a style of art, and Art Nouveau and Expressionist artists such as Edvard Munch. Beginning in France as a reaction to the movements of Naturalism and Realism, which seemed to capture the particular components of consensual reality, and presented spirituality and imagination reflecting some artists budding interest in religion and spirituality.
In literature, poet Charles Baudelaire was developing his work and the movement, and especially with such luminaries as Verlaine contributing to the collective effort of the literary movement during the 1860s and through to the 1870s. With the works of Edgar Allen Poe coming to popularity in the 1880s, the Symbolism movement in artwork represented an outgrowth into the darker and more gothic nature of Romanticism, and contrasted with Romanticism’s rebellious and impetuous sides. Symbolist writers wrote in very metaphoric and suggestive manner, to imbue the subjects with a sense of symbolic meaning, and made realistic images into representatives for more esoteric and primordial ideas.
In translating the language of dreams into artwork with symbolic leanings, discovering a visual style that draws upon that philosophical approach that captures a sense of art that has been influential on more than one movement artistically, and has evoked some of the more fantastic imagery to ever cross a canvas. The Symbolist Manifesto was published in 1886, leading to a description of the movement that included ideas such as being hostile towards plain and matter-of-fact meanings, and to express the ideal in a perceptible form was the sole purpose of this art form.
Symbolists that preferred poetic means of conveying their ideas, were known for their techniques of removing technical aspects to achieve a greater fluidity for their work, and became related with seeking use of symbolic images over raw description to evoke the state of the poet’s soul. Paul Verlaine was influential in an 1884 publication defining the essence of Symbolism, through many essays on the relevant poets of the day, and came to the conclusion of relating the works of this movement to the famed philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer, whose own work delved into art as a means of refuge from the strife of the world.
These similarities, which presented a contemplative and artistic refuge using themes such as mortality and otherworldliness, created disparaging arguments between critic and artist alike. Leading to many Symbolist poets of the day to make their own publications and periodicals, and the literary Symbolism then reached its’ peak in the year 1886, with one particular periodical lasting until 1965. Though the two aspects of the movement were distinct, they would occasionally overlap each other, and became a continuation for mystical tendencies in a Romantic tradition, even flirting with the self-consciously dark Decadence movement.
There were several dissimilar groups of painters and visual artists within the Symbolism movement, and the artistic movement seemed to have a greater impact worldwide than the literary movement, reaching multiple artists and sculptors from such distinct parts as Russia. Many of the symbols found herein are not necessarily universal, but more personally affected with the artist’s obscure and private references, with some dreamlike subject matter influencing later Surrealists. Symbolism has had a strong link to music for a while, and mostly due to the enthusiasm for the work of Richard Wagner, whose own music reflected his influence from the philosopher Schopenhauer.
Symbolism even grew to affect some of the literary fiction contributed by Oscar Wilde and Paul Adam, and has a pronounced ring when speaking about movements that have literary and artistically that have crossed over into other inner groupings of artistic work. The waters of Symbolism have even filtered down the centuries into the state of motion pictures today, and early on held influence with Russian playwright Anton Chekhov, as well as Russian actor and director Vsevolov Meyerhold’s method of acting that influenced early motion pictures.
It is difficult to overlook Symbolism’s influence and repercussions throughout the timeline to the current period of the world, as it drifts through many aspects taken for granted on a daily basis, and many pieces of work for many artists from writer T. S. Eliot to painter Pablo Picasso and even the state of horror films as well. A decidedly different state of the world now has interpreted and reinterpreted all this throughout these hundreds of years, and created more and more material reflections of the state of things as they happen to be.
About the Author
Matthew represents thousands of collectors around the world looking for all types of antiques and collectibles. Treasure Hunters Roadshow represents these private collectors who are actively seeking items for their collection.
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Salvador Dali (Paysage Aux Papillons, Landscape with Butterflies) Art Poster Print – 24×36 $4.00 Salvador Dali (Paysage Aux Papillons, Landscape with Butterflies) Art Poster Print – 24×36… |
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H.R. Giger (Anima) Art Poster Print – 24×36 $5.22 H.R. Giger (Anima) Art Poster Print – 24×36… |
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Salvador Dali (Paysage Aux Papillons) Art Poster Print – 24×36 $1.52 Salvador Dali (Paysage Aux Papillons) Art Poster Print – 24×36… |
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Salvador Dali: 1904-1989 (Basic Art) $4.25 Superb reproductions of paintings by one of the 20th century’s most famous artists: The Visage of War, The Enigma of Desire, the well-known Persistence of Memory, 13 others…. |
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Surreal Friends $36.48 “Surreal Friends” brings together for the first time the work of three women Surrealist artists, friends in exile in Mexico in the 1940s: British painter Leonora Carrington, Spanish painter Remedios Varo and Hungarian photographer Kati Horna. Leonora Carrington fled to Mexico in the 1940s when her love affair with Max Ernst was interrupted by the outbreak of the Second World War. In Mexico City sh… |
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Surrealist Motion – Volume One (Blu-ray Disc) $31.18 Transform a flat-screen television into a mesmerizing photo frame with this first volume of paintings in motion. Classic surrealist works from the 20th century are enhanced not only by the high-definition clarity of the modern television screen, but by… |
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‘Guinea Fowl’ Ink Painting on Card Stock Original Art (Brazil) $149.99 India ink ‘Guinea Fowl’ painting by Brazilian artist Jacira BaptistaHandmade artwork depicts the fusion of a woman and a guinea fowlOriginal art in a surreal style is a unique addition to your wall decor |
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John Armstrong (Hardcover) $55.25 Most art history mention John Armstrong (1893-1973) in the context of Unit One and the development of British abstraction in the 1930s. Or else, he is categorized as a surrealist. Neither label fits his varied output. Although he painted abstracts thro… |
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Chihuly Seaforms $18.07 In Chihuly: Seaforms, Artforum art critic Seeman Robinson discusses Chihuly’s most exquisite and ethereal series, invoking the spontaneous automatic drawings of the Surrealists, the water lilies of Claude Monet, the action painting of Jackson Poll… |
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The Mystery Guest $10.89 A memoir that reads like a novel with a plot like a French film about a cocktail party as painted by a surrealist, THE MYSTERY GUEST is Gregoire Bouillier`s delicious story of being at famous conceptual photographer Sophie Calle`s birthday party to |

