We inhabit the corrosive littoral of habit
Oil On Canvas
WallArt
Surrealism
1940
Modern
40.0 x 51.0 cm
National Gallery of Victoria
This painting is a seminal early work by Gleeson. It was exhibited in 1940 in the 2nd Contemporary Art Society exhibition where it received the joint award for the most outstanding work. Stylistically and iconographically indebted to Salvador Dali, the disintegrating face presents an emotionally charged metaphor for the corrosion of the world and the human mind as a result of war. Gleeson’s subsequent wartime paintings were to become more confronting in their use of imagery.James Gleeson, born in 1915, became Surrealism’s most prominent practitioner and advocate in Australia. In the late 1930s Gleeson studied at the East Sydney Technical College and the Sydney Teachers College where he had access to a large library of art books and journals, although he considered that ‘I was born a Surrealist.’ For Gleeson, the war and Surrealism were inextricably linked, and he later said: ‘For a while, especially during the war years, I did think of Surrealism as a revolutionary weapon. I accepted Breton’s contention that by utilising the subconscious one could arrive at a condition that held the rational mind in balance and perhaps prevent such disasters as war, indifference or fanaticism.’ (James Gleeson, interview with Lou Klepac, in James Gleeson: landscape out of nature, The Beagle Press, Sydney, 1987, p.14).Text © National Gallery of Victoria, Australia
james timothy gleeson (1915 – 2008)
Explore James Timothy Gleeson’s surrealist paintings & poetry – dark landscapes, fleshy forms, & enigmatic visions. Australia's foremost surrealist artist.
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About this artwork
- Title: We inhabit the corrosive littoral of habit
- Artist: james timothy gleeson
- Year: 1940
- Original dimensions: 40.0 x 51.0 cm
- Format: Landscape
- Copyright status: Under copyright
- Where to see it: National Gallery of Victoria
- Movement: Surrealism
- Medium: Oil On Canvas
- Creative period: Early Period
Quick Facts
- Artist: James Gleeson
- Subject or theme: Corrosion of mind and world due to war
- Dimensions: 40 x 51 cm
- Influences: Salvador Dali
- Year: 1940
- Notable elements: Disintegrating face, split imagery