Surrealism (1945 - 1954)

Untitled (Surrealist Composition with Keyhole Figure and Tree with Green-Blue), 1950, mixed media on paper, 7 3/4” x 4 3/4". Paul Bongé Collection
A transitional period in Dusti Bongé's career from her early representational work toward complete abstraction.
Following her early period of representational work, Dusti Bongé entered a period of highly subjective, Surrealist experimentation. In fact, as early as 1938, Bongé had begun to experiment with Surrealism and eventually worked in that style for over a decade. The Surrealists believed in the power of the unconscious to unlock artistic imagination and they thought the rational mind only repressed this imagination. Their creative approach was to forgo conscious thought, embrace chance, tap into human emotion and desire, and use fantasy or dream imagery.
Bongé fully explored the highly subjective and dream-like juxtapositions of unrelated elements that sprang from her irrational, subconscious mind. And like many other artists working in this style she invented her own recurring motifs, initially inspired by images of the “Circus”. Throughout this time and into the early 1950s, her Surrealist style continued to evolve as she began her depictions of what she uniquely called “Keyhole People.” These humanoid forms are unlike any seen in other surrealist painters.
Eventually this surrealist work became totally abstract.
Below is a sampling of Dusti Bongé's surrealist work work. For more surrealist works, please visit:
Surrealhttps://www.dustibonge.org/surrealismism
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