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Title
What Makes a Collection Surrealist?: Twentieth-Century Cabinets of Curiosities in Paris and Houston
Description
Breton’s surrealist collection constitutes a twentieth-century cabinet of curiosity that like its baroque predecessors, sought to encompass the world within a contained and concentrated space. This essay argues what makes it a surrealist collection, lies in its ghostliness, its cultivation of a global aesthetic informed by a curiosity about psychological depth. This surrealist collecting sensibility persists in New World collections like the Menil Collection in Houston, which is similarly characterized by ghostliness. Surrealist collections have the potential to help contemporary museum viewers understand better the history of the current aesthetic produced by globalization.
Date Created
2012
Contributors
- Conley, Katharine (Author)
Resource Type
Extent
23 Pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
Yes
Open Access
Yes
Series
Journal of Surrealism of the Americas, VOL 6, NO 1 (2012)
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.17380
Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
System Created
- 2013-05-23 12:02:31
System Modified
- 2021-06-18 02:53:16
- 3 years 5 months ago
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