Surrealist artists are fully pursuing this fantastic effect. Their aesthetic creed was put forward by Brayton in his first surrealist manifesto. "Incredible things are always beautiful, all incredible things are beautiful, and only incredible things are beautiful." "Beauty may not be shocking." In this way, the absurd dream world brought by Dali is really beautiful-soft watches hanging on trees, dismembered bodies, skeletons in terrible backgrounds, and so on. The nightmare scene created by recognizable deformed images looks fine and realistic, and it is distant and strange. This style is called naturalistic surrealism (naturalism? Surrealism), whose representative painters are not only Dali, but also Margaret and others. Another style of surrealism is called organic realism, represented by Milo, which pursues fantasy and abstract pictures related to vitality.
▲ tree?
In Margaret's paintings, trees are one of the few themes that can make the vision coherent. Trees?
Although the image continues to develop upward, its underground roots firmly grasp the momentum of this continuous upward development. Margaret's tree sometimes stomps its chopped axe on its feet, and sometimes its branches and leaves turn into a bird about to spread its wings, but no matter how its shape changes, it always stands peacefully, generously, happily and happily in the world of painting.