Ambiguity

  Ambiguity


Ambiguity in art means that the artwork has several possible interpretations or meanings of an uncertain nature. This could be reached by incorporating something that typically doesn’t belong but is noticeable when you first see the piece; think a fork in a lake.


Jean-Pierre Zaugg Fork of Vevey

When I see an artwork with ambiguity, I think it adds to its meaning rather than takes it away. It gives the possibility of numerous meanings, each of them just as likely as the other, rather than just one pre-set meaning.




Rene Magritte The Lovers

Magritte was a surrealistic painter from Belgium. I like this painting of his the most because his use of the sheets or ‘veils’ used to cover the figures identities. I like to interpret this as by not showing the subjects identities, you can insert yourself into the painting and make it personal to you. Surrealism in general uses masks and disguises to hide what lies underneath the surface. 



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