Cubomania is a Surrealist technique of making collages by cutting an image into squares and reassembling without regard for the original image at random [1] [2] to create something new. [3]
The technique was invented by the Romanian surrealist Gherasim Luca. [4] [5] Luca introduced cubomania at two exhibitions in Bucharest, in 1945 and 1946, and in small publications. [6] Luca positioned cubomania as a mix of Karl Marx's and André Breton's ideas. It was a critique of the alleged objectivity of social conditions and rejected the tyranny over liberty. [6]
It has been described as a "statistical method". [7]
Penelope Rosemont and Joseph Jablonski have suggested that cubomania can "subvert the enslaving 'message' of advertising and to free images from repressive contexts." [8]