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Surrealism
Surrealism, which had many international manifestations and which began as a literary movement before developing into an artistic one, was pioneered in France under the leadership of André Breton in the 1920s.
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The Nostalgia of the Poet
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Giorgio de Chirico, The Nostalgia of the Poet (La nostalgie du počte), 1914. Oil and charcoal on canvas, 35 5/16 x 16 inches. Peggy Guggenheim Collection. 76.2553.65. Giorgio de Chirico © 2007 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/SIAE, Rome.


This work belongs to a series of paintings of 1914 on the subject of the poet, the best known of which is the Portrait of Guillaume Apollinaire. Recurrent motifs in the sequence are the plaster bust with dark glasses, the mannequin, and the fish mold on an obelisk. These objects, bearing no evident relationships to one another, are compressed here into a narrow vertical format that creates a claustrophobic and enigmatic space.

As in The Red Tower, the use of inanimate forms imitating or alluding to human beings has complex ramifications. The sculpture at the lower left is a painted representation of a plaster cast from a stone, marble, or metal bust by an imaginary, or at present unidentified, sculptor. The character portrayed could be mythological, historical, symbolical, or fictional. The fish is a charcoal drawing of a metal mold that could produce a baked “cast” of a fish made with an actual fish. The fish has additional connotations as a religious symbol, and the hooklike graphic sign toward which its gaping mouth is directed has its own cryptic allusiveness. The mannequin is a simplified cloth cast of a human figure—a mold on which clothing is shaped to conform to the contours of a person. Each object, though treated as solid and static, dissolves in multiple significations and paradoxes. Such amalgams of elusive meaning in Giorgio de Chirico’s strangely intense objects compelled the attention of the Surrealists.

Lucy Flint