"No longer is it a matter of the narrow roads where traditional beauty is offered in its clarity and obviousness to the admiration of the crowds. The crowds were taught the victory of intelligence over the world and the submission of the forces of nature to man. Now it is a question of seizing and admiring a new art which leaves humankind in its true condition, fragile and dependent, and which nevertheless, in the very spectacle of things ignored or silenced, opens unsuspected possibilities to the artist. And this is the domain of the strange, the Marvelous, and the fantastic, a domain scorned by people of certain inclinations. Here is the freed image, dazzling and beautiful, with a beauty that could not be more unexpected and overwhelming. Here are the poet, the painter, and the artist, presiding over the metamorphoses and the inversions of the world under the sign of hallucination and madness....Here at last the world of nature and things makes direct contact with the human being who is again in the fullest sense spontaneous and natural. Here at last is the true communion and the true knowledge, chance mastered and recognized, the mystery now a friend and helpful."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
"Domain of the Marvelous," letter in the "Surrealist Number" of Vine Magazine (1941)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Suzanne_C%C3%A9saire
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Suzanne Césaire
7 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Suzanne Césaire →
Related Quotes
"The theorist should not let us forget the poet."
"Our problem now is to determine whether the Ethiopian attitude that we discovered was the very essence of our whole w…"
"Surrealism lives! And it is young, ardent, and revolutionary. In 1943 surrealism surely remains, as always, an activi…"
"Such is surrealist activity, a total activity: the only one capable of liberating humankind by revealing the unconsci…"
"No important figure in the history of surrealism has been so overshadowed by a spouse as Suzanne Césaire, wife of poe…"
"surrealists had questioned technology, "progress," and the dominant Euro-American attitude toward nature long before …"
"... This is a most decorative herb, with pink buds on stems covered with purplish-grey hairs that glisten in the sun.…"
"grows some 6–12in. high, spreading laterally, with a "japanses" style of growth, and has mint-blue flowers, like the …"
"In one home, the newly-wed is learning to cook, and as her husband enjoyed straight , she is enchanted when her roast…"
"A striking plant from Tibet, the asafoetida has stimulant properties, and is a close relative of ) which it resembles…"