Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    星期二, 16 6 月
    Instagram Pinterest TikTok RSS
    • Home
    • Categories
      • Fashion
      • Beauty
      • Tech
    • Seasonal
    • Guides
    Home - What Is Surrealism? Alex Eagle Explains the Art Movement
    Seasonal

    What Is Surrealism? Alex Eagle Explains the Art Movement

    longdaBy longda2026年5月31日没有评论3 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Eagle Eye exists to explain the gaps—between how we dress and how we live; between the spaces you’re drawn to and the coat you keep reaching for. Each month, London-based designer and creative director Alex Eagle will tap her roster of friends and experts to explore the “why” behind a certain theme—why we’re drawn to certain things, and how those instincts quietly form over years without us really noticing. It’s a column rooted in interior design, with many branches (and, of course, a curated edit of shoppable products to boot).


    The first time Surrealism made sense to me, I was quite young. Dalí’s clocks, encountered in a book or on a classroom wall, did something that purely abstract art never quite managed: they let me in. So precise, so real in their rendering, and then completely, quietly wrong. It’s reality with the dial turned just slightly, and I’ve never really recovered from it, if I’m honest. The Venice Art Biennale opened this month under the theme In Minor Keys, curated by the late Koyo Kouoh. It’s a theme that’s intimate, poetic, quietly unsettled—for me, that’s enough to send the mind back to Surrealism.

    The term was originally coined in Paris in the 1920s, when the poet André Breton published his manifesto calling for art rooted in the unconscious—dreams, desire, irrationality—as a revolt against the order that had, in his view, led Europe to catastrophe. The movement that followed produced some of the most arresting images in the history of art: Dalí’s melting clocks, Magritte’s bowler-hatted men, Meret Oppenheim’s fur-lined teacup. Its relevance has never felt more immediate than it does right now, in the era of relentless optimization and algorithm-approved wardrobes. As Egyptian designer Laila Gohar, whose objects and tablescapes are among the most Surrealist-inflected pieces being made today, puts it: “Minimalism and quiet luxury is just bloody boring. People want things with a pulse again.”

    If modernism, which I wrote about last month, gives permission to edit, Surrealism gives permission to dream. Delfina Delettrez, a jewelry designer whose works operate somewhere between the body and the subconscious, describes it as “desiring without logic—allowing instinct, obsession, memory, contradiction, humor, sensuality, and fantasy to enter the room.” Marie-Louise Scio, CEO and creative director of Il Pellicano with one of the most instinctive collector’s eye I know, frames it more simply. “Surrealism opens the door to emotion, fantasy, and the unexpected.”

    Which brings me back to Venice and to Peggy Guggenheim, whose house on the Grand Canal is less museum, more layered, slightly eccentric collage. What I find so compelling about her world is how un-precious it feels: Art not kept at reverent distance, but lived amongst, brushed past on the way to lunch, set slightly askew if that’s how it felt right. That quality is what I look for now in the things I buy and the spaces I build, and I’m not alone. Gohar owns a giant silver teapot that is, she freely admits, completely unusable: too dramatic to pour from, too beautiful to put away. “I love objects that seem functional at first and then slowly reveal themselves as emotional instead,” she says. “A home should not feel so uptight.” In the end, what Surrealism offers is the freedom to hold contradictions without needing to resolve them. Not everything needs to add up. Venice, this month, feels like exactly the right place to remember that.

    Shop Alex Eagle’s Guide to Surrealism:

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous Article23 Vintage Photos of Sophia Loren Being the Ultimate European Summer Muse
    Next Article This Is How Interior Designers Display Family Photographs
    longda
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Pitti Uomo and Milan Fashion Week Men’s Cheat Sheet: Spring/Summer 2027

    2026年6月16日

    The World Cup’s Back, Alright! Uber Kicked Off the Summer of Soccer with a Big Bash

    2026年6月16日

    Kate Middleton Salutes British Craftsmanship in Custom Patrick McDowell for the 2026 Order of the Garter

    2026年6月16日
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    About

    SonemGlobal is a blog-style product discovery site that shares curated recommendations across fashion, beauty, home, tech, and gifts. We highlight top picks, affordable finds, helping readers discover great products easily.Impact-Site-Verification: b83e2a7c-0fd8-4c0e-820d-ee69854ce42b

    We're social, connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest
    HELP
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Accessibility Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Disclaimer
    Copyright © 2026. Designed by sonemglobal.com.
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Accessibility Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.