
I'm also really aroused by the idea so many Surrealists sought refuge in Mexico. Favorites such as Remedios Varo, Frida Kahlo, and Leonora Carrington called Mexico their home. They and several other artists began a small transcendental surrealist movement after they fled during the Nazi occupation France (as did Salvador Dali and many other artists throughout Europe). André Breton visited Mexico in 1938. He returned to Paris convinced he had been to a land that lived and breathed Surrealism everyday.

Once in Mexico, Surrealism quickly took root in unexpected ways. In literature, Octavio Paz, Juan José Arreola, Jorge Ibargüengoitia, the Spanish filmmaker Luis Buñuel, who had collaborated with Dalí on the landmark Surrealist film Un chien andalou (1929) in Europe, fled the Spanish Civil War and wound up in Mexico, where he made such classics as The Exterminating Angel (1962). Surrealist poet and patron Edward James built Las Pozas, a surrealist sculpture garden in a tropical rain forest in the mountains of Mexico.

Related links ~
Home of the Surrealist
The Return of Quetzalcoatl
wow, I truly admire your eclectic tastes! i'm a little envious in fact, lol. anyways, I just anted to let you know just how much I enjoy visiting this page. I learn something new every time I come by.
ReplyDeleteI love the paintings. Thank you for sharing them.
ReplyDeleteYou really are a cabinet full of curiosities, eh? =) Do tell us if you do decide to runaway. =)
Kane
Woohoo! Let's go! =D
ReplyDeleteI love your painting so much. You like Mexican life. Hope you can do it!
ReplyDeleteI am ready to run away!! Packing my bag right now!!!
ReplyDeleteYou rock!!
Uff!! you should definitely do it! I live in northern México and if you are looking for a guide, I'll totally join you!
ReplyDeleteI heard Las Pozas are great! Its a great spot to spend the weekend and its really cheap. In summertime is quite annoying because of the jungle and the heat, but during fall is beautiful! You should plan a backpacker trip!!! Yeeeey!
There are a lot of witchy places down in Michoacán and Oaxaca.
Hope one day you can make it.
Kisses, hun.
L
well Salvia never did it for me, but an interesting read none the less, check out my new nonsense blog based on a book Im writing called Random Thought Reader
ReplyDeletehttp://randomthoughtreader.blogspot.com/
Raiz Viva. Its a very old traditional Mexican song. Its lovely.I highly recommend listening to it.
ReplyDeleteI found the paintings extra ordinary. They are different from the other paintings.
ReplyDeletequell, and quarrel. and for X,
ReplyDeleteI adore the eclectic nature of your blog postings :) I feel like I am sitting in a room with you and you are telling me your stories while showing me the pictures you have posted. I have never been to Mexico City, but I too like to travel and have seen a lot of places. I think we all need a new life sometimes, and I suppose that is why we wake up to new days. :)
ReplyDeleteWow what a great collection. Keep up the good work!!
ReplyDeleteI absolutely love Mexican surrealism! Thanks for a great post.
ReplyDeleteDescubro este blog con encanto...! This post about mexican surrealism is really stunning : )
ReplyDeleteI dreamt of running away to Mexico for a long while, as well! Mexico, and Latin America in general is so rich and saturated with color and symbolism that captures you with every sense. If you follow your dream, I will enjoy following your adventures here.
ReplyDeleteAH! My favourite 3 artists in one post, thank you!
ReplyDeleteMexican Surrealism! One of my favorite forms! Such a beautiful blog post. Of course, I would expect nothing less.
ReplyDeleteIf I were to run away, I fear I might never return.
Can i come along?
ReplyDelete