We live in surreal times. On the day of this letter’s writing in early March, when I search Google for recent uses of that adjective in the news, I found Mike Krzyzewski, longtime Duke University basketball coach, telling ESPN of his impending retirement, “it’s been a surreal few days.” I found actor Sam Richardson saying to CBS of his newfound success, “it’s kind of surreal.” I found Texas teenager Jackson Reffitt testifying to jurors that the experience of tipping off the FBI about his father’s participation in the storming of the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, was “surreal.” Having become part of the vernacular, the word has in certain ways eroded in meaning, so it’s been refreshing to have a hefty museum exhibition, “Surrealism Beyond Borders”—which debuted at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York this past October and is currently on view at Tate Modern in London—remind us what Surrealism, according to the artists and writers who invented it, was actually all about. We at Art in America have taken the occasion of that show to meditate on the movement, and delve into what it means in the context of art being made today.
Defining a movement is not as simple as revisiting uncanny objects, automatic writing, and exquisite corpses. In her deep dive into the historiography of Surrealism and how various exhibitions have presented it over the years, Art in America Senior Editor Rachel Wetzler finds it eminently malleable, going from a harbinger of Abstract Expressionism to a plaything for theorists to a vehicle for global revisionism.
Surrealism casts a long shadow, and many artists working today remain very much engaged with it—in very different ways. Yasmina Price explores how Black experimental filmmakers, engaged in what cinema scholar Terri Francis in 2013 dubbed “Afrosurrealism,” have used the movement’s disorienting techniques to investigate colonialism and racism. Travis Diehl looks at a group of Los Angeles painters steeped in a twenty-first-century version of Surrealism. And Art in America Associate Editor Emily Watlington reminds us that the endlessly inventive Meret Oppenheim was far more than just the creator of a famous fur cup.
That Surrealism was born between two world wars will surely not be lost on today’s readers, who—beginning just as this issue was going to press—have been mired in images of horrific battle scenes in Ukraine. Some of Surrealism’s most brutal imagery—Salvador Dalí’s, for instance—was inspired by the conditions of war. At its heart, Surrealism has always been a prompt: how do we envision the unimaginable?
—Sarah Douglas, Editor in Chief
DEPARTMENTS
Jacky Connolly by Josie Thaddeus-Johns
An interplay of real versus virtual experience pervades the work of this Upstate New York–based artist.
Cecilia Alemani, artistic director of the Venice Biennale, shares five current interests.
Cross Contamination by Maru García with Max Liboiron
A chemist-turned-artist and an artist-turned-scientist discuss pollution, decolonization, and biological remedies.
David Ebony on Raymond Saunders’s Beauty in Darkness, 1993–99
An enormous collage-painting evokes segregation’s random horrors and small daily humiliations.
HARD TRUTHS
by Chen and Lampert
Artist-curators Howie Chen and Andrew Lampert offer tongue-in-cheek takes on art world dilemmas.
The Asphalt Avant-Garde by Jackson Arn
Viewing the US highway system as a gigantic work of art.
Zoé Samudzi on Bénédicte Savoy’s Africa’s Struggle for Its Art: History of a Postcolonial Defeat.
HANDS ON
Q&A with Anika Tabachnick, creative aging programs associate at the Bainbridge Island Museum of Art.
FEATURES
by Ara H. Merjian
A love-hate relationship played out between Surrealist dreamers and the radical Left.
by Rachel Wetzler
Globalizing the movement’s history leaves its fundamental nature in doubt.
by Lucy Ives
Eccentric multimillionaire writer Raymond Roussel helped lay the groundwork for Surrealism’s psychological fantasias.
by Emily Watlington
Meret Oppenheim’s fiercely independent, logic-defying work goes far beyond her iconic furred teacup.
by Travis Diehl
Young LA artists are giving consumer items an uncanny painterly treatment. A print by Orion Martin accompanies the article.
by Yasmina Price
Using disruptive techniques, Black filmmakers challenge the social biases “normalized” in conventional movie forms.
by Rob Horning
Artificial intelligence belies the liberating promise of Surrealist automatic writing.
REVIEWS
SOPHIE TAEUBER-ARP
Museum of Modern Art, New York
Rachel Wetzler
“CERAMICS IN THE EXPANDED FIELD”
MASS MoCA, North Adams, Massachusetts
Janet Koplos
SHANNON EBNER
Kaufmann Repetto, New York
Hiji Nam
BASEERA KHAN
Brooklyn Museum, New York
TK Smith
ROCHELLE FEINSTEIN
Bridget Donahue and Candice Madey, New York
Jackson Arn
ASHLEY BICKERTON
Lehmann Maupin and O’Flaherty’s, New York
David Ebony
PHILIP SMITH
Primary, Miami
Gean Moreno
THEODORA ALLEN
Blum & Poe, Los Angeles
Leah Ollman
“WITCH HUNT”
Hammer Museum and the Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles
Liz Hirsch
“CONGRESS”
Norval Foundation, Cape Town
Nkgopoleng Moloi