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  1. Vor 2 Tagen · L'artiste. Max ERNST 1891-1976. Max Ernst est né en 1891 à Brühl (Allemagne). Peintre et sculpteur, son œuvre est rattachée au mouvement Dada et surréaliste. Il crée ses premières peintures, impressions à la main et collages en 1919. Travaillant sur divers supports, son travail est inspiré de la psychologie et de l’art des malades mentaux.

  2. As a man who constructed his dreams, Cheval posthumously became a hero for Surrealist artists. Max Ernst, in the guise of his alter ego Loplop Superior of Birds (present here both in the gouached bird on the left and in the rectangular blue figure with head and cravat on the right), pays homage to him in this collage, which is part of a series ...

  3. Vor 4 Tagen · 1932. Max ERNST Facteur Cheval (fac-similé) The artist. Max ERNST 1891-1976. Max Ernst was born in Brühl, Germany, in 1891. A painter and sculptor, his work is associated with the Dada and Surrealist movements. He created his first paintings, hand prints and collages in 1919.

  4. Max Ernst, a surrealist and Dadaist, created a painting entitled “Facteur Cheval”. At the fourth biennial of contemporary art, “l’autre”, in Lyon in 1997, one of the first items on the tour was a 1/10 scale model of the Palais made by the architect Alain Duperron .

  5. 30. Juni 2017 · Max Ernst went, too, and created the collage The Postman Cheval (Le Facteur Cheval) (1932) in response. Today, it hangs in the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice. And Picasso made a series of 12 sketches in 1937, after his trip to Hauterives; one clearly references the towering nude women that Cheval sculpted into Palais Idéal ...

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  6. 3. Mai 2007 · Lee Miller, Brassaï and Doisneau took pictures, Max Ernst made a collage, "Facteur Cheval," now at the Peggy Guggenheim palazzo in Venice. Picasso filled a notebook with 12...

  7. This article assesses the interaction of Cheval with the Surrealists Max Ernst and André Breton, questioning his cannibalisation and mythologisation within their works and his construction as a ‘proto-Surrealist.’