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Contribution to Book
Surrealist Collections in Paris and Sussex
Surrealism (2021)
  • Katherine Conley, William & Mary
Abstract
Surrealism thrived within environments characterized by a profusion of collected objects that inspired the surrealist collector’s work and thought. André Breton (in Paris) and Roland Penrose and Lee Miller (in Sussex) had well-documented collections that reveal the practice of collecting at the root of surrealist theories of the object; they anticipated recent explorations of new materialism by Bruno Latour and Jane Bennett, and of the object as thing by W. J. T. Mitchell. Breton saw “concealed realities” and “latent possibilities” in objects in a way that foreshadowed the “vital materialism” Bennett finds in things. Like Breton, Penrose and Miller favored objects that had had a ceremonial function in their culture of origin, remote in time as well as geographically, as a way of understanding themselves better. In both collections, the impressive sculptures from the Pacific Islands exemplify the surrealist desire to orient the self within a larger world through objects capable of looking back.
Publication Date
October, 2021
Editor
Natalya Lusty
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Series
Cambridge Critical Concepts
ISBN
9781108495684
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108862639.008
Citation Information
Katherine Conley. "Surrealist Collections in Paris and Sussex" Surrealism (2021) p. 131 - 150
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/katharine-conley/52/