Surrealism and Dada

Eachin is an act of shared psychic automatism. Two artists bind their bodies together to paint as one mind—entering a state where intention dissolves and the image arrives unbidden.

In the spirit of the first Surrealist Manifesto, we reject authorship, logic, and ego in favor of emergence, intuition, and interdependence. We do not compose—we surrender. The paintings are not planned; they are dreams made visible through mutual trust.

Eachin is not a collaboration—it is a shared trance in pigment and time.

We do not paint with our own hands. We paint with a hand that exists between us.

Like Dada, we reject the myth of the solitary artist. We resist logic, authorship, and polished meaning. But where Dada fractures, we fuse. Where Dada tears apart, we tie together.

Our method is absurd, inefficient, and tender. It is not satire. It is a leap of faith. We do not aim to provoke. We aim to disappear into a shared mark that neither of us could make alone.

Eachin is not anti-art. It is pre-language.