Magritte developed techniques to mimic the things that happen in dreams. Look at the painting of the fireplace and train, to the right. The scene is impossible! And yet, you can probably come up with a story to explain where the train came from and where it is going. In our dreams, strange juxtapositions make sense to us. Here Magritte asks you to make sense of them while you’re awake.
Can you make sense of The Therapist above? Magritte substitutes a birdcage for the ribcage of a man, inviting you to look for similarities between the two. But why does the man wear a hat if he has no head? And how does he sit if there is no chair beneath him? The artist doesn’t provide an answer. Dreams, after all, can’t always be explained.
In The Tomb of the Wrestlers, below, Magritte uses an unnatural scale to disorient you. This could be a normal-size room filled with a giant rose, or a normal-size rose in a room inside a dollhouse. As in a dream, it is open to interpretation.