The Promenades of Euclid
On View In:
Gallery 376
Artist:   René Magritte  
Title:   The Promenades of Euclid  
Date:   1955  
Medium:   Oil on canvas  
Dimensions:   64 1/8 x 51 1/8 in. (162.88 x 129.86 cm) (canvas) 73 7/8 x 60 7/8 x 4 in. (187.64 x 154.62 x 10.16 cm) (outer frame)  
Credit Line:   The William Hood Dunwoody Fund  
Location:   Gallery 376  

Surrealism was an art of fantasy, dream, and the unconscious, delving into the recesses of the human psyche to discover mysterious, bizarre, and often disturbing images. René Magritte, however, was a Surrealist painter more fascinated by puzzles and paradoxes than by the nature of the unconscious. The Promenades of Euclid presents the age-old problem of illusion versus reality. In this witty picture within a picture, the canvas in front of the window seems to exactly replicate the section of city it blocks from view. But does it? Could the twin forms of tower and street exist only in the artist's imagination? Or do we view the actual city through a transparent canvas?

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   Magritte, René  
Nationality:   Belgian  
Life Dates:   Belgian, 1898 - 1967  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:   Signature and Date; Inscription (on verso) in black: [LES PROMENADES D'EUCLIDE 1955] LL in black: [Magritte]; see inscription  
Classification:   Paintings  
Physical Description:   City view in general; "veduta"; trompe l'oeil. The interior of a room with a painting on an easel sitting in front of a window. Through the window a cityscape can be seen; the scene on the painted canvas seems to exactly replicate that section of the city which it blocks from view. Two triangular shapes dominate the center of the painting. One is the conical roof of a stone tower, while the other is a near-empty avenue shown in rapidly receding perspective. These two triangles are an oblique reference to Euclid, the father of geometry.  
Creation Place:   Europe, Belgium, , ,  
Accession #:   68.3  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts