Here are six masters of surrealistic art. Each one of them reminds us that the world is full of wonders — not only on the outside, but also in the depths of our imagination. The bonus at the end of this article will change your vision and trick your brain. Be careful!
The Sun Sets Sail
Unfinished Puzzle
Ladies of the Lake
Bedtime Aviation
Some refer to the style of drawing practised by Rob Gonsalves as ’surrealism’. However, we think ’magical realism’ might be more appropriate. The strange, unnoticed union between different but equally real worlds and the subtle but impossible transformations of objects are the thread which runs through all of Gonsalves’ paintings. He reminds us through his brilliant work that everything around us is in some ways interconnected.
Apple calendar
The labyrinth of spring
Winter wave
Library
Polish artist Jacek Yerka is famous around the world for his fantastical and mysterious paintings. A lover of drawing since childhood, he had to defend his unique style in the face of objections from his traditionalist teachers at art school, who found his surreal — some might say visionary — approach too outlandish.
Reflections
Shutters
Paradoxical interior
Deceptive light
Nothing in the paintings of British artist Neil Simone is what it seems at first glance. "For me, the world around us is a series of fragile and ever-changing forms, shades and borders", says Simone. Indeed, all of his paintings give the impression of illusion and interconnection, where the boundaries between objects are blurred.
Invitation to dinner
Windmills
Sunset over the ocean
Waves breaking against the ship
There is some mysterious element in all the work by Vladimir Kush which is quite simply mesmerizing. It’s as though they are lit from the inside, creating the impression that the viewer is there participating in the scene themselves.
Iris
Yes/No
Don’t judge a book by its cover
Comet
Rafal Olbinski, a well-known artist from Poland, is one of those who can make you see utterly ordinary things from a completely different perspective. This is surely the mark of a truly talented surrealist — to allow us to glimpse a world which is not real, yet which can to some degree "exist" vividly in the mind’s eye.
Two birds
Stalingrad
Painting in Italian Style (left); Forest Song (right)
Oleg Shupliak, a 47-year-old artist from Ukraine, was originally an architect. Yet his talent for surrealist art is self-evident to anyone who sees so much as one piece of work by him. He has the uncanny ability to create optical illusions in his work, which can be "read" by the viewer in completely different ways.