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Kiran Rani

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Uranus conjunct Mars
By Kiran Rani
Located in Staten Island, NY
Uranus conjunct Mars 16”x 20” acrylic on canvas painting by Las Vegas-based Kiran Rani is loaded
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Surrealist More Art

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Really Out Here
By Kiran Rani
Located in Staten Island, NY
Surrealist dream. “Really Out There” represents the embarkation of a journey into uncharted territory. Actual footage of me exiting my comfort zone. "Who are you and how did you get...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Surrealist Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Tiger Lilith
By Kiran Rani
Located in Staten Island, NY
Original painting. Symbolic of the fine line between the vivacious and belligerent sides of a woman. While she is soft, delicate and energetically healing, another side lies dormant...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Surrealist Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Test Run
By Kiran Rani
Located in Staten Island, NY
This acrylic on canvas artwork is about having the ambition and desire to go through the trial and error phase. Representative of what does and does not work. Wanting to create somet...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Surrealist Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

in Deep
By Kiran Rani
Located in Staten Island, NY
The element of Water. Symbolic for unexplored emotions hidden beneath the surface. It represents the disconnect from what's logical and practical in the physical realm; what is unsee...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Surrealist Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Are you Afraid of the Light
By Kiran Rani
Located in Staten Island, NY
The embarkation of the journey into uncharted territory. Actual footage of me exiting my comfort zone. "Who are you and how did you get here?" Experiencing things that I don't unders...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Surrealist Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

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A Close Look at surrealist Art

In the wake of World War I’s ravaging of Europe, artists delved into the unconscious mind to confront and grapple with this reality. Poet and critic André Breton, a leader of the Surrealist movement who authored the 1924 Surrealist Manifesto, called this approach “a violent reaction against the impoverishment and sterility of thought processes that resulted from centuries of rationalism.” Surrealist art emerged in the 1920s with dreamlike and uncanny imagery guided by a variety of techniques such as automatic drawing, which can be likened to a stream of consciousness, to channel psychological experiences.

Although Surrealism was a groundbreaking approach for European art, its practitioners were inspired by Indigenous art and ancient mysticism for reenvisioning how sculptures, paintings, prints, performance art and more could respond to the unsettled world around them.

Surrealist artists were also informed by the Dada movement, which originated in 1916 Zurich and embraced absurdity over the logic that had propelled modernity into violence. Some of the Surrealists had witnessed this firsthand, such as Max Ernst, who served in the trenches during World War I, and Salvador Dalí, whose otherworldly paintings and other work responded to the dawning civil war in Spain.

Other key artists associated with the revolutionary art and literary movement included Man Ray, Joan Miró, René Magritte, Yves Tanguy, Frida Kahlo and Meret Oppenheim, all of whom had a distinct perspective on reimagining reality and freeing the unconscious mind from the conventions and restrictions of rational thought. Pablo Picasso showed some of his works in “La Peinture Surréaliste” — the first collective exhibition of Surrealist painting — which opened at Paris’s Galerie Pierre in November of 1925. (Although Magritte is best known as one of the visual Surrealist movement’s most talented practitioners, his famous 1943 painting, The Fifth Season, can be interpreted as a formal break from Surrealism.)

The outbreak of World War II led many in the movement to flee Europe for the Americas, further spreading Surrealism abroad. Generations of modern and contemporary artists were subsequently influenced by the richly symbolic and unearthly imagery of Surrealism, from Joseph Cornell to Arshile Gorky.

Find a collection of original Surrealist paintings, sculptures, prints and multiples and more art on 1stDibs.