Birth: May 11, 1904 - Figueres, Spain
Death: January 23, 1989 - Figueres, Spain
Salvador Dalí, in full Salvador Felipe Jacinto Dalí y Domenech, was a Spanish Surrealist painter and printmaker, influential for his explorations of subconscious imagery.
As an art student in Madrid and Barcelona, Dalí assimilated a vast number of artistic styles and displayed unusual technical skill 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 the human subconscious over reason. To bring up images from his subconscious mind, Salvador Dalí began to induce hallucinatory states in himself by a process he described as “paranoiac critical.”
Once Salvador Dalí hit on that method, his painting style matured with extraordinary rapidity, and from 1929 to 1937 he produced the paintings which made him the world’s best-known Surrealist artist. He depicted a dreamworld in which commonplace objects are juxtaposed, deformed, or otherwise metamorphosed in a bizarre and irrational fashion. Salvador Dalí portrayed those objects in meticulous, almost painfully realistic detail and usually placed them within bleak sunlit landscapes that were reminiscent of his Catalonian homeland. Perhaps the most famous of those 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, Salvador Dalí made two Surrealistic films—An Andalusian Dog (1929) and The Golden Age (1930)—that are similarly filled with grotesque but highly suggestive images.
In the late 1930s Salvador Dalí switched to painting in a more-academic style under the influence of the Renaissance painter Raphael. His ambivalent political views during the rise of fascism alienated his Surrealist colleagues and he was eventually expelled from the group. Thereafter, he spent much of his time designing theater sets, interiors of fashionable shops, and jewelry as well as exhibiting his genius for flamboyant self-promotional stunts in the United States, where he lived from 1940 to 1955. In the period from 1950 to 1970, Salvador Dalí painted many works with religious themes, though he continued to explore erotic subjects, to represent childhood memories, and to use themes centering on his wife, Gala. Notwithstanding their technical accomplishments, those later paintings are not as highly regarded as the artist’s earlier works. The most interesting and revealing of Salvador Dalí’s books is The Secret Life of Salvador Dalí (1942).
* Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Salvador Dalí". Encyclopedia Britannica, 3 Jan. 2023, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Salvador-Dali. Accessed 6 January 2023.
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