Thursday, August 24, 2023

 

 "Poetry will be made by all" - Isidore Ducasse, Comte de Lautréamont

Surrealism is, above all, a collective adventure. The surrealists are, in the words of an early  manifesto, specialists in revolt, as well as compulsive players of collective games. Surrealists are driven by the revolutionary imperative to destroy the chasm between artists and poets on the one side, and consumers on the other. As Lautréamont, a precursor and early hero of the surrealists put it, "poetry will be made by all". The great wall erected by capitalism between poets and alienated workers must be smashed with material hammers. Collective games and creative play are key means of accomplishing this. 

Surrealism has never been an art movement, much less a style of painting or writing. Focused on piercing the veil between dreams and everyday life, surrealism has always rejected the society of the spectacle which keeps most of us in chains, weighed down by what William Blake called mind-forged manacles. To break those manacles surrealists come together to make art, poetry and revolution. Breton summed it up as follows: 

'Change the world,' said Marx; 'Change Life,' said Rimbaud; 'for us, these projects are the same'.

Surrealists have used a variety of techniques - for example the game of Exquisite Corpse (see example above by Breton, Lamba and Tanguy) - to enable the blossoming of objective chance and to realise the revolutionary desire to collaborate on eruptions of convulsive beauty. Joint work has always been undertaken on the basis of elective affinities - that subtle attraction of like-minded individuals which is so much more powerful than the entry requirements of any card-carrying organisation. There are no card-carrying surrealists - only surrealist friends and allies who come together to play, make poetry (images, words, deeds), and to support all who struggle against capitalism, war and environmental destruction.

If you feel drawn to the surrealist idea, and to surrealist practice - or if you would just like to learn more  - then why not get in touch? Enquiries from anyone living in Bristol or the south-west would be particularly welcome - collective adventures beckon! Email your questions, dreams and proposals to: uplandtrout@hotmail.co.uk.

"Let the dawn stoke up the rust of your dreams"

- Breton/Eluard.

 

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