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Automatism:

Automatism:. Gateway to the Subconscious Mind. Presentation by A. A. Schorsch. Miro Birth of the World (stretched) http://www.moma.org/collection/depts/paint_sculpt/blowups/paint_sculpt_014.html. Automatism. au·tom·a·tism [ aw tómmətìzəm ] noun

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Automatism:

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  1. Automatism: Gateway to the Subconscious Mind Presentation by A. A. Schorsch Miro Birth of the World(stretched) http://www.moma.org/collection/depts/paint_sculpt/blowups/paint_sculpt_014.html

  2. Automatism au·tom·a·tism [ aw tómmətìzəm ] noun 4. painting literature artistic method: an artistic approach, associated with the surrealists, in which the painter or writer empties the mind and allows the unconscious to direct the work http://encarta.msn.com/dictionary_/Automatism.html Automatism involves painting shapes and colors as they automatically come to the artist’s mind; consisted of allowing the hand to wander across the canvas surface without any interference from the conscious mind. The resulting marks, it was thought, would not be random or meaningless, but would be guided at every point by the functioning of the artist’s unconscious mind, and not by rational thought or artistic training. http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761587547/William_Baziotes.html#461547769

  3. Automatic Drawing Automatic drawing was developed by the surrealists, as a means of expressing the subconscious. In automatic drawing, the hand is allowed to move 'randomly' across the paper. In applying chance and accident to mark-making, drawing is to a large extent freed of rational control. Hence the drawing produced may be attributed in part to the subconscious and may reveal something of the psyche, which would otherwise be repressed. Automatic drawing was pioneered by André Masson. Artists who practiced automatic drawing include Joan Miró, Salvador Dalí, Jean Arp and André Breton. The technique was transferred to painting (as seen in Miró's paintings which often started out as automatic drawings), and has been adapted to other media; there have even been automatic "drawings" in computer graphics. Pablo Picasso was also thought to have expressed a type of automatic drawing in his later work, and particularly in his etchings and lithographic suites of the 1960s. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surrealist_automatism

  4. André Masson (French 1896-1987) Moon Sun 1938 Color lithograph 10" x 13 1/2"  http://www.fine-art.com/Lyceum/ModMasters/Masson/

  5. André Masson The Seeded Earth 1942

  6. "Rather than setting out to paint something, I begin painting, and, as I paint, the picture begins to assert itself. . . . The first stage is free, unconscious. The second stage is carefully calculated." ~Joan Miró http://www.moma.org/collection/depts/paint_sculpt/blowups/paint_sculpt_014.html

  7. JOANMIRÒ (Spanish 1893 - 1983)  Characters of the Night http://www.home-school.com/Mall/Artext/miro-big.jpg

  8. William Baziotes American (1912-1963) • Primeval Landscape • (age 41) • http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761587547/William_Baziotes.html#461547769

  9. Dorothea Tanning To The Rescue Oil on Canvas, 1965 The Salvador Dalí Museum, St. Petersburg, Florida http://hoodmuseum.dartmouth.edu/collections/recent/200615.html

  10. Dorothea Tanning Heartless Oil on Canvas, 1980 http://hoodmuseum.dartmouth.edu/collections/recent/200615.html

  11. Salvador Dali The Disintegration of Persistence of Memory Oil on Canvas, 1952-54, The Salvador Dalí Museum, St. Petersburg, Floridahttp://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1952_02.jpg

  12. Salvador Dali The Three Sphinxes Of Bikini Oil 1947 http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1947_04.jpg

  13. Salvador Dali Rock Figure After the Head of Christ in the Pieta of Palestrina by Michelangelo Oil 1982 http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1982_36.jpg

  14. Salvador Dali Apparition Of Venus Oil on Canvas, 1952-54 The Salvador Dalí Museum, St. Petersburg, Florida http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1952_02.jpg

  15. Salvador Dali (Spanish 1904 - 1989) Galatea of the Spheres Oil on Canvas 1952 Fundación Gala-Salvador Dalí, Figueres http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1952_03.jpg Galatea, name given in the 18th century to the animated statue sculpted by Pygmalion (mythology). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galatea The previous year, Dalí had written his Mystical Manifesto, where he pronounced a new component of his universe, This double image of Gala combines the stimuli of spirituality and science, two recurrent obsessions in Dali's works dated after the Second World War. http://www.dali-gallery.com/html/galleries/painting19.htm

  16. Salvador Dali Birth of a Divinity Oil 1960 http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1960_01.jpg

  17. Salvador Dali Raphaelesque Head Exploding Oil 1951 http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1951_02.jpg

  18. Salvador Dali Study for the Head of the Virgin Pencil, Ink, & Gouache 1952 http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1952_17.jpg

  19. Salvador Dali Nuclear Head of an Angel Black Ink & Sepia Pencil 1952 http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1952_16.jpg http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1952_16.jpg

  20. Salvador Dali Head of a Gray Angel 1952-54 http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1952_09.jpg

  21. Salvador Dali Madonna and Particle Child Nuclear Drawing BallPoint, 1954 http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1954_18.jpg

  22. Salvador Dali The Wheelbarrows Wash & Pencil 1951 http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1951_03.jpg

  23. Salvador Dali Galatée Oil, 1954 http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1954_20.jpg

  24. Salvador Dali Celestial Coronation Circa1951 Gouache & Collage http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1951_11.jpg

  25. Salvador Dali Figure Study for William Tell Ink , 1932 http://www.dali-gallery.com/images/works/1932_26.jpg

  26. Lori Nozick Meggido Charcoal 2000 http://www.lnozickart.com/d2_meggido.htm

  27. Lori Nozick Tree House Charcoal 1998 http://www.lnozickart.com/d6_treehouse.htm

  28. Lori Nozick Meggido Charcoal, Oil Stick 2000 http://www.lnozickart.com/d3_dockwalk.htm

  29. Danielle Vennard Dann Animal Acts V5 Charcoal Tracing Paper 2006 http://www.dzartworks.com/DZ%20Drawings.htm

  30. Jeff Bixler Self-Portrait, Pt. IV Charcoal http://www.baz-net.com/portfolio/pages/eye%20charcoal.htm

  31. Jeff Bixler Self-Portrait, Pt. II Charcoal http://www.baz-net.com/portfolio/pages/nose%20charcoal.htm

  32. Jeff Bixler Self-Portrait, Pt. III Charcoal http://www.baz-net.com/portfolio/pages/hands%20charcoal.htm

  33. Cari Campbell Grade: High School Charcoal http://panthers.k12.ar.us/High_School/Departments/Art/StudentPortfolios/2005/Cari_Campbell/CariC_charcoal04.jpg

  34. Tim Warren Charcoal 2007 6th Grade Amanda Jansen Mourning Night Charcoal 2007 6th Grade

  35. What modern art means is that you have to keep finding new ways to express yourself, to express the problems, that there are no settled ways, no fixed approach. ~Louise Bourgeois (Born 1911- French-born American sculptor, painter, and graphic artist) http://encarta.msn.com/quote_561549936/Modern_Art_What_modern_art_means_is_that_you_have_to.html View of Louise Bourgeois's sculpture Spider from the roof of the Winter Palace in the Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg, Russia http://www.hermitagemuseum.org/html_En/13/hm13_2_001_1.html

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