How Did Rene Magritte Influence The Use Of Repetition In Pop Art

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Introduction: René Magritte is a 20th century Belgian Artist. He was influenced by André Breton -a writer known as the founder of surrealism-for his 1924 Surrealist Manifesto, Sigmund Freud-a neurologist-for his psychoanalysis that repetition is a sign of trauma. He studied at the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Paris between 1916 and 1918.1 After leaving because he thought that it was a complete waste of time, and upon meeting Victor Servranckx-a fellow artist who introduced Magritte to futurism, cubism and purism-Jean Metzinger and Fernand Leger had a large influence on his early works of cubism. Magritte wanted to stay away from the distractions that came with modern painting styles; he went with a mask-like technique instead. "They want …show more content…

René Magritte’s art influenced a change of movements from Surrealism to Pop Art for his use of repetition in his art works as well as of his art works. The repetition of his surrealist works influenced the use of repetition in Pop Art, though the reason behind why each of the movements incorporated them are …show more content…

His use of everyday objects in attempt to bring a new light to them by making the viewers of his art see something so different than what it plainly was, such as bowler hats which we see in The Mysteries of the Horizon (1955), The Son of a Man (1964), Man in a Bowler Hat.11 His close association with commercial art was also a factor that led to influencing the Pop Art movement. “The Surrealist belief that an inanimate object is as human as an organic, that the world of appearance is also the world of disguise, and that image is the mechanism for understanding the many levels of reality, are the commonplace of pop and conceptual

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