About this artwork
This painting is an important late example of Magritte’s work and the largest version of this subject, which he treated on four occasions. Unlike some of the other Surrealists, who believed that the unconscious could express itself through chance and automatic techniques, Magritte planned his paintings with meticulous rigour and executed them with all the trompe l’oeil skills of a traditional painter. The results are surprisingly realistic images of seemingly illogical scenes. Magritte would undermine the logic of illusionism by tampering with scale and perspective and by placing objects in unexpected settings.
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title:La Légende des siècles [The Legend of the Centuries]
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accession number:GMA 5619
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artist:
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gallery:
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object type:
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materials:Oil on canvas
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date created:1950
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measurements:80.60 x 60.70 cm
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credit line:Drue Heinz Bequest, 2018.
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copyright:© ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2018
René Magritte
René Magritte
Magritte was born in Belgium and, apart from a few years spent in Paris in the late 1920s, lived there all his life. Unlike many Surrealists, Magritte did not subscribe to the view that the unconscious could be expressed through chance or 'automatic' techniques. Instead, he planned and executed his…