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Website about Fantasy Art - online portal of Art gallery worldwide. Other useful information: Surreal art - surreal paintings, giclee prints, surreal drawings created daily, flash work, and audio collage by surrealist painter and percussionist James Sebor
also the Frenchman who invented surrealism back in 1924 with the publication
over a pizza parlor - how surreal. No need for TV anymore, he saw surrealism
but if surrealism, with its emphasis on the melding of conscious images with
Featured fantasy art Artist - Meet a new name in our Gallery-worldwide. We present you Evgeny Agnin's collection of surrealistic artworks. Creator of ethno-rock music style, with the origin of former Shaman family Agnin is worth then just looking through
Fantasy Art - Fantasy Art often depict unexpected or irrational
objects in an atmosphere of fantasy, creating a dreamlike scenario. Surrealism - Surrealism is destructive, but it destroys only what it considers to be shackles limiting our vision. ( Salvador Dali )
| | Surrealism-Surreal Art-Surreal Paintings And Prints By James Sebor - also the Frenchman who invented surrealism back in 1924 with the publication
over a pizza parlor - how surreal. No need for TV anymore, he saw surrealism
but if surrealism, with its emphasis on the melding of conscious images with
Surrealism-Surreal Art-Surreal Paintings and Prints by James Sebor
Surreal
Paintings by James Sebor
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If
you were to ask James Sebor the name of his favorite surrealist, you might
expect the name, Salvador Dali, to come up. . But the name Sebor is more likely
to mention is that of Andre Breton .
And if you're only captivated by the dreamlike content and surrealistic style
of Sebor's work, that name might fly over YOUR head. If so, let it fly; don't
ask what he painted. Andre Breton was a writer and poet, not a painter. He's
of his Surrealist Manifesto.
From the time he was a child, James
Sebor seemed destined to be an artist. He was born on Vincent van
Gogh's 104th
birthday in 1957, the son of a conductor on the Long Island Railroad. Like
so many of us, Sebor grew up with a third parent - television. (Chuck
Jones
(Road Runner) and Max Fleischer (Popeye) for example and other influences
outside of television; Bill Elder Jack Davis Wally Wood
(Mad Magazine) and Frank Zappa (Musician) to name a few ) . Television
is, by its very nature, a surreal world. And to the fertile mind of a naturally
creative child, unfettered by adult perceptions, it's a world of not just
limitless POSSIBILITIES, but limitless PROBABILITIES. Sebor's surrealistic
art reflects this as much as it reflects Breton or Dali. With a BA from
Southampton
College under his arm and graduate studies at New York's School of Visual
Arts under his hat, Sebor left Long Island for the most surrealistic state
(and state of mind) on earth - California. There, in Oceanside, he found
the closest thing to an artist's "heaven on earth," a studio
right
from his studio window. Today, he's back living on Long Island, playing the
New York gallery game, playing drums in a band with the rather surreal
name,
the Bed Rockers ,
and married to a school psychologist. All of which must make for some rather
surreal conversation over dinner.
Don't
expect to look at James Sebor's " Great
Invisibles " series or his sensitive " Millie ,"
a touching tribute to his mother's death in 1999, and hope to understand his
work. Surrealism is a method of thought, rather than a great mystery to be
unraveled. With time and study, individual works may be unwound, if not unraveled,
unconscious and subconscious memories, were that simple it would no longer
provoke our minds. Sebor plays games with our minds - cat and mouse games
- as in his series by the same name. His work ranges from the merely strange
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