Elza Adamowicz presents an analysis of surrealist collage, both as a
technique of cutting and pasting ready made material, and as a
subversive and creative strategy. She considers verbal collage,
pictorial collage, and the hybrids they generate, and discusses the
works of Max Ernst and André Breton, as well as those of Aragon,
Brunius, Eluard, Hugnet, Magritte, Péret, Styrsky and others. Focusing
on the recycling of art-historical icons, the parodic reworking of
narrative clichés, the concept of defamiliarisation of the banal, or the
relations between part bodies and totalities, she offers close readings
of individual collages, and links specific aspects of collage practice
to central issues of surrealist aesthetic and political thought.
Throughout this well illustrated study Adamowicz confronts the
'monstrous' nature of collage, grounded on excess and composed of
irretrievable fragments and hovering signs.