Magritte was one of the artists I studied for A Level (SAT II, Fat Yanks) and I was always drawn to the darker, stranger side of his work.
Although technically this isn't his most aesthetically pleasing work, there's a certain "innocence lost" quality to his piece "Girl Eating A Bird":
Other odd themes include bondage and the obscuring of faces, of course.
I sometimes enjoy the way surrealists have an eerie, distancing quality to their work, even in pop art pieces. As an example, I've always found Bob Cato's cover to Moby G****'s "Wow" to be oddly unnerving:
[IMG]//eil.com/images/main/Moby+G****+Wow+418464.jpg[/IMG]
Although technically this isn't his most aesthetically pleasing work, there's a certain "innocence lost" quality to his piece "Girl Eating A Bird":
Other odd themes include bondage and the obscuring of faces, of course.
I sometimes enjoy the way surrealists have an eerie, distancing quality to their work, even in pop art pieces. As an example, I've always found Bob Cato's cover to Moby G****'s "Wow" to be oddly unnerving:
[IMG]//eil.com/images/main/Moby+G****+Wow+418464.jpg[/IMG]
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