Salvador
Dali SALVADOR FELIPE JACINTO DALÍ Y
DOMENECH (b. May 11, 1904, Figueras, Spain--d. Jan. 23, 1989, Figueras),
Spanish Surrealist painter. As an art student in Madrid and Barcelona, Dalí
assimilated a vast number of artistic styles and displayed unusual
technical facility as a painter. It was not until the late 1920s,
however, that two events brought about the development of his mature
artistic style: his discovery of Sigmund Freud's writings on the erotic
significance of subconscious imagery, and his affiliation with the Paris
Surrealists, a group of artists and writers who sought to establish the
"greater reality" of man's subconscious over his reason. To
bring up images from his subconscious mind, Dalí began to induce
hallucinatory states in himself by a process he described as
"paranoiac critical.
From 1929 to 1937 he produced the paintings which made him the world's
best-known Surrealist artist. He depicted a dream world in which
commonplace objects are juxtaposed, deformed, or otherwise metamorphosed
in a bizarre and irrational fashion. Dalí portrayed these objects in
meticulous, almost painfully realistic detail and usually placed them
within bleak, sunlit landscapes that were reminiscent of his Catalonian
homeland. .... the most famous of these enigmatic images is
"The Persistence of Memory" (1931), in which limp, melting
watches rest in an eerily calm landscape. With the Spanish director Luis
Buñuel, Dalí also made two Surrealistic films-- Un Chien andalou
(1928; An Andalusian Dog) and L'Âge d'or (1930; The
Golden Age)--that are similarly filled with grotesque but highly
suggestive images. Tekst preuzet iz enciklopedije Britanica. |