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Freud And Surrealism Term Paper

Freud and Surrealism Art and science are strongly interrelated fields. It has been through the recognition of the compatibility between art and science that some of the greatest achievements in both areas have been created. It was Michaelangelo, the artist, that made revolutionary anatomical discoveries in the pursuit of art, discoveries which would become an integral part of the development of medicine. The early mapmakers were the first to create mathematical grids, and those principles would be translated into perspective and proportion for artists recreating three-dimensional objects in two-dimensional art. Along this same vein, the scientific study of the mind, psychology, has had a significant impact on art. The father of modern psychology, Sigmund Freud, discovered the metaphysical "psyche" in his search to understand the symptoms of his patients, opening up science and medicine to the world beyond the physical. Artists latched onto his theories about the importance of the subconscious and readily applied them to an artistic movement which sought to link the subconscious world of the abstract to the conscious material world. This would become the Surrealist movement, bringing messages from the subconscious through interpretation of art. Salvador Dali was one of the great artists of the Surrealist movement, tying the bizarrely abstract to the mundanely real through dreamlike paintings. In Dali's 1944 painting "One Second Before Awakening from a Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a Pomegranate," the influence of Freud's theories about the subconscious and dream interpretation is integral to the understanding of this piece. Specifically, the way in which the dream-self of the piece feels about his relationship with his mother, his father, his sexuality, and his very existence are inherently Freudian.

The prominent image of the bright red pomegranate fruit floating in the air of the painting above the sleeping figure is very obviously a reference to female genitalia. The vaginal shape of the fruit sets the theme of the dream created here by Dali. However, this is not a beautified or idealized female representation, for although it is made of sweet fruit, it has many obvious flaws. Among these flaws is the very infected, diseased appearance of the genitalia; the pomegranate seeds resemble genital warts or other sexually transmitted diseases in their lumpy, oozing existence. Additionally, the pomegranate vagina is transforming into a fish vagina. The second vaginal form is less deceptive in appearance. Whereas the fruit appears sweet and nutritious with a sense of pending rot, the fish is smelly and slimy outright. The fish represents the negative view of the female genitalia as having an unpleasant texture and odor. Both the pomegranate vagina and fish vagina are a flame-like color, and in fact the flame-fish seems to be directly emanating from the clitoral area of the genitals, the center of the passion and "fire" of female sexuality. The seeds of pomegranate also hold special meaning, for they are seeds of life, the eggs of the mother. They fall from the genital pomegranate into the space below in an ovulation of sorts, exposing the eggs to the outside masculine forces of the painting, hovering just above the water of the womb.
The female genitals in Dali's work are not inactive, but rather engaged in a symbolic act of simultaneous…

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Dali, Salvador. "One Second Before Awakening from a Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a Promegranate." 1944.

Rostrup, Truls. "The Surrealists and Freud." 1996. http://www.uib.no/people/ssptr/surreal.htm

Sanchez, Monica. "Surrealism: The Art of Self-Discovery." http://www.bway.net/~monique/surreal.htm
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