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| Surrealist Salon | |
The Surrealist Salon came about as a collaboration between three UMF classes, Elizabeth Olbert’s art class Contemporary Surrealism, Steven Pane’s Improvising Music course, and Michael Johnson’s course on the literature of the 1920s. Salons, at which artists, musicians, writers, and intellectuals gathered to share work and to talk about art and ideas, were central to European and American culture of the 1920s (and, in prohibition-era America, the promise of illegal alcohol was an added attraction to the Salon experience). The Salon, by its very nature, was what we now call “interdisciplinary,” as was the artistic movement known as surrealism, which first flourished in the 1920s in visual arts, literature, music, and film, and which continues to be an influence on contemporary artists. Surrealist artists broke away from the conventions of realism and rejected reason and rationality as a grounds for artwork. Surrealists works were often experimental, sometimes dreamlike, and often intended to shock. Surrealist writers emphasized the role of accident in the production literature. They would sometimes produce poems by cutting out words from a newspaper and then drawing the words out of a hat to create a brief poem (“Know that / the violet rays / have finished their task / short and sweet”). Surrealists also invented a game called “exquisite corpse,” in which members of a group create a sentence or a story, with each member contributing a sentence or word without knowing what has been written before or what will follow after. By folding over the paper, earlier writing is hidden from view, a technique that can also be used with drawing. Both versions of the game were played at the Surrealist Salon. As Surrealism envisions art as something everyone can and should do, the Surrealist Salon followed this participatory principle by requiring guests who attended the Salon to make their own tickets, which were then collected and displayed. Students from the Contemporary Surrealism class made the artworks that were on display at the Gallery during the Salon, which included performance art, “balloon” art (which was also a word game), and food art (which was edible and mostly eaten by the end of the Salon). Students from Improvising Music performed throughout the Salon. The literature students read scenes from Carl Van Vechten’s 1930 novel Parties, which has several scenes set at salons and speakeasies
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Tickets made by guests for admission to the salon |
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Rebecca Seidel coordinates
the
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The balloon word game: create sentences by picking up balloons. |
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The Salon's Town Crier (aka Josh) read the results of one of t |
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Evan Whitehead, Nicole Doyle, and David Bersell read from Carl Van Vechten’s Parties. |
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Salon guests listen to the reading |
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Ty Thurlow and David Bersell read |
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Poet, lobsterman, and postman (“Sous le pont Farmington coule la |
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Salon guest and famous artist |
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The Salon was always in motion, as guests moved from one area of the gallery to another, and from one exhibit, event, performance, game to another. |
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One of the student artworks on exhibit: |
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The Great Wall of Wafers |
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Students from the Improvising |
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Pouting indeed! |
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Rebecca Seidel, leading a round
of exquisite corpse. |
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he Exquisite Corpse games: 









