Talk:The Child's Brain

Influence on the Surrealists
Some mention should definitely be made of the huge influence of this painting on the nascent Surrealist Movement. When it was first exhibited in the front window of a gallery in Paris, Yves Tanguy, who was at the time a merchant seaman with no training or interest in art, glimpsed it from a passing bus, leapt off the moving vehicle for a better look, and was so profoundly affected by it that he instantly decided to devote the rest of his life to painting. Which he did, and after a shaky start due to his total lack of experience, he soon became one of the greatest Surrealist painters of them all.

André Breton also told the exact same anecdote about himself, right down to the detail about jumping off a moving bus, except that he did it a few days before Tanguy, so he was as cool as Tanguy, but even cooler because he did it first. Coincidences do happen, so maybe neither of them was lying, but all things considered, I'm more inclined to believe Tanguy.

Whatever really happened, the pictures de Chirico painted between 1913 and 1918 massively influenced the Surrealists, and this particular canvas was especially significant. I realise that since it has never (as far as I know) been mentioned in passing by Bart Simpson or Batman it doesn't deserve one of those pop culture references subsections that make so many of your articles look as though they were written by autistic children, but since it had a non-trivial influence on the kind of popular culture that matters to grown-ups, perhaps a few words on the subject might usefully be added? 86.132.249.222 (talk) 11:26, 3 November 2023 (UTC)