Monday, August 19, 2019
René Magritte Essay -- Arts Paintings Art History
Renà © Magritte    Belgian Surrealist artist Renà © Magritte was a master not only of the  obvious, but of the obscure as well. In his artwork, Magritte toyed  with everyday objects, human habits and emotions, placing them in  foreign contexts and questioning their familiar meanings. He suggested  new interpretations of old things in his deceivingly simple paintings,  making the commonplace profound and the rational irrational. He  painted his canvasses in the same manner as he lived his life -- in  strange modesty and under constant analysis. Magritte was born in 1898  in the small town of Lessines, a cosmopolitan area of Belgium that was  greatly influenced by the French. Twelve years later, Magritte, along  with his parents and two younger brothers, moved to Chà ¢telet, where  the future artist studied sketching.    On vacations with his grandmother and Aunt Flora during the summer  months, Magritte frequented an old cemetery at Soignies. In this  cemetery, Magritte often played with a little girl, opening trap doors  and descending into underground vaults. This experience would prove a  great influence upon his later artwork, as wooden caskets and granite  tombstones recur in many of his paintings. Magritte also developed a  fascination with religion around this time, often dressing up as a  priest and holding mock mass services in complete seriousness. In  1912, Rà ©gina Bertinchamp, Magritte's mother, committed suicide by  drowning herself in the Sambre River. The night of her suicide, the  Magrittes followed Bertinchamp's footprints to the river, where they  found her dead with her nightgown wrapped around her face. Magritte  was 14 at the time. He would claim years later that his only  recollection of his mother's death was his pride at being the center  of attention and his subsequent identity formation as the "son of a  dead woman." Some critics point out that several of the subjects in  Magritte's paintings are veiled in white sheets as a reference to his  mother's suicide.    A year later, Magritte's father moved the family to Charleroi. It was  in Charleroi that Magritte would meet his future wife Georgette Berger  on a carousel at the town fair. However, the two would not see one  another again until a chance meeting in Brussels years later. In  Charleroi, Magritte quickly lost interest in his studies and asked his  father for permission to study at the Acadà ©mie des Beaux-Arts in  Brussels. ...              ... Faubourg  in Paris. The exhibition caused much scandal, but won few admirers.  Soon after, Magritte resigned to his original style, though he  bitterly attributed this retroaction to his desire to please  Georgette, who preferred his earlier paintings.    He continued to acquire much success all over the world with  paintings such as L'Empire des Lumià ¨res (The Empire of Lights, 1954),  which employed standard Surrealist techniques and precise Magritte  lines. On August 15, 1967, Magritte died in Brussels. Unlike many of  his Surrealist counterparts, Magritte lived quite humbly and incon  uously. He did not draw much attention to himself, and he lived life  relatively uneventfully. Despite his unassuming lifestyle, though,  Magritte managed to leave an artistic legacy of transforming the  ordinary into the fantastic. While some art historians attribute  Magritte's art to his desire to oppose and combat the triviality of  everyday life, others suggest that his work goes beyond escapism and  serves to reveal some of the murkier and complex aspects of the human  condition.    Whatever the impetus was for his art, it is certain that Magritte's  works are at once hauntingly beautiful and deeply provocative.                      
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