Salvador Dali
Spanish artist
and Surrealist icon Salvador Dalí is perhaps best known for his painting of
melting clocks, The Persistence of Memory.
QUOTES
“Don't bother
about being modern. Unfortunately it is the one thing that, whatever you do,
you cannot avoid.”
—Salvador Dalí
Who Was Salvador Dalí?
Salvador Dalí
was born on May 11, 1904, in Figueres, Spain. From an early age Dalí was
encouraged to practice his art, and he would eventually go on to study at an
academy in Madrid. In the 1920s, he went to Paris and began interacting with
artists such as Picasso, Magritte and Miró, which led to Dalí's
first Surrealist phase. He is perhaps best known for his 1931 painting The
Persistence of Memory, showing melting clocks in a landscape setting. The rise
of fascist leader Francisco Franco in Spain led to the artist's expulsion from
the Surrealist movement, but that didn't stop him from painting. Dalí died in
Figueres in 1989.
Early Life
Salvador Dalí
was born Salvador Felipe Jacinto Dalí y Domenech on May 11, 1904, in Figueres,
Spain, located 16 miles from the French border in the foothills of the Pyrenees
Mountains. His father, Salvador Dalí y Cusi, was a middle class lawyer and
notary. Salvador's father had a strict disciplinary approach to raising
children—a style of child-rearing which contrasted sharply with that of his
mother, Felipa Domenech Ferres. She often indulged young Salvador in his art
and early eccentricities.
It has been said
that young Salvador was a precocious and intelligent child, prone to fits of
anger against his parents and schoolmates. Consequently, Dalí was subjected to
furious acts of cruelty by more dominant students or his father. The elder
Salvador wouldn't tolerate his son's outbursts or eccentricities, and punished
him severely. Their relationship deteriorated when Salvador was still young,
exacerbated by competition between he and his father for Felipa's affection.
Dalí had an
older brother, born nine months before him, also named Salvador, who died of
gastroenteritis. Later in his life, Dalí often related the story that when he
was 5 years old, his parents took him to the grave of his older brother and
told him he was his brother's reincarnation. In the metaphysical prose he
frequently used, Dalí recalled, "[we] resembled each other like two drops
of water, but we had different reflections." He "was probably a first
version of myself, but conceived too much in the absolute."
Salvador, along
with his younger sister Ana Maria and his parents, often spent time at their
summer home in the coastal village of Cadaques. At an early age, Salvador was
producing highly sophisticated drawings, and both of his parents strongly
supported his artistic talent. It was here that his parents built him an art
studio before he entered art school.
Upon recognizing
his immense talent, Salvador Dalí's parents sent him to drawing school at the
Colegio de Hermanos Maristas and the Instituto in Figueres, Spain, in 1916. He
was not a serious student, preferring to daydream in class and stand out as the
class eccentric, wearing odd clothing and long hair. After that first year at
art school, he discovered modern painting in Cadaques while vacationing with
his family. There, he also met Ramon Pichot, a local artist who frequently
visited Paris. The following year, his father organized an exhibition of
Salvador's charcoal drawings in the family home. By 1919, the young artist had
his first public exhibition, at the Municipal Theatre of Figueres.
In 1921, Dalí's
mother, Felipa, died of breast cancer. Dalí was 16 years old at the time, and
was devastated by the loss. His father married his deceased wife's sister,
which did not endear the younger Dalí any closer to his father, though he
respected his aunt. Father and son would battle over many different issues
throughout their lives, until the elder Dalí's death.
Art School and
Surrealism
In 1922, Dalí
enrolled at the Academia de San Fernando in Madrid. He stayed at the school's
student residence and soon brought his eccentricity to a new level, growing
long hair and sideburns, and dressing in the style of English Aesthetes of the
late 19th century. During this time, he was influenced by several different
artistic styles, including Metaphysics and Cubism, which earned him attention
from his fellow students—though he probably didn't yet understand the Cubist
movement entirely.
In 1923, Dalí
was suspended from the academy for criticizing his teachers and allegedly
starting a riot among students over the academy's choice of a professorship.
That same year, he was arrested and briefly imprisoned in Gerona for allegedly
supporting the Separatist movement, though Dalí was actually apolitical at the
time (and remained so throughout most of his life). He returned to the academy
in 1926, but was permanently expelled shortly before his final exams for
declaring that no member of the faculty was competent enough to examine him.
While in school,
Dalí began exploring many forms of art including classical painters like
Raphael, Bronzino and Diego Velázquez (from whom he adopted his signature
curled moustache). He also dabbled in avant-garde art movements such as Dada, a
post-World War I anti-establishment movement. While Dalí's apolitical outlook
on life prevented him from becoming a strict follower, the Dada philosophy
influenced his work throughout his life.
In between 1926
and 1929, Dalí made several trips to Paris, where he met with influential
painters and intellectuals such as Pablo Picasso, whom he revered. During this
time, Dalí painted a number of works that displayed Picasso's influence. He
also met Joan Miró, the Spanish painter and sculptor who, along with poet Paul
Éluard and painter René Magritte, introduced Dalí to Surrealism. By this time,
Dalí was working with styles of Impressionism, Futurism and Cubism. Dalí's
paintings became associated with three general themes: 1) man's universe and
sensations, 2) sexual symbolism and 3) ideographic imagery.
All of this
experimentation led to Dalí's first Surrealistic period in 1929. These oil
paintings were small collages of his dream images. His work employed a
meticulous classical technique, influenced by Renaissance artists, that
contradicted the "unreal dream" space that he created with strange
hallucinatory characters. Even before this period, Dalí was an avid reader of
Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic theories. Dalí's major contribution to the
Surrealist movement was what he called the "paranoiac-critical
method," a mental exercise of accessing the subconscious to enhance
artistic creativity. Dalí would use the method to create a reality from his
dreams and subconscious thoughts, thus mentally changing reality to what he
wanted it to be and not necessarily what it was. For Dalí, it became a way of
life.
In 1929, Salvador
Dalí expanded his artistic exploration into the world of film-making when he
collaborated with Luis Buñuel on two films, Un Chien andalou (An
Andalusian Dog) and L'Age d'or (The Golden Age, 1930), the former of
which is known for its opening scene—a simulated slashing of a human eye by a
razor. Dalí's art appeared several years later in another film, Alfred
Hitchcock's Spellbound (1945), starring Gregory Peck and Ingrid
Bergman. Dalí's paintings were used in a dream sequence in the film, and aided the
plot by giving clues to solving the secret to character John Ballantine's
psychological problems.
In August 1929,
Dalí met Elena Dmitrievna Diakonova (sometimes written as Elena Ivanorna
Diakonova), a Russian immigrant 10 years his senior. At the time, she was the
wife of Surrealist writer Paul Éluard. A strong mental and physical attraction
developed between Dalí and Diakonova, and she soon left Éluard for her new
lover. Also known as "Gala," Diakonova was Dalí's muse and
inspiration, and would eventually become his wife. She helped balance—or one
might say counterbalance—the creative forces in Dalí's life. With his wild
expressions and fantasies, he wasn't capable of dealing with the business side
of being an artist. Gala took care of his legal and financial matters, and
negotiated contracts with dealers and exhibition promoters. The two were
married in a civil ceremony in 1934.
By 1930,
Salvador Dalí had become a notorious figure of the Surrealist movement.
Marie-Laure de Noailles and Viscount and Viscountess Charles were his first
patrons. French aristocrats, both husband and wife invested heavily in
avant-garde art in the early 20th century. One of Dalí's most famous paintings produced
at this time—and perhaps the best-known Surrealist work—was The
Persistence of Memory (1931). The painting, sometimes called Soft
Watches, shows melting pocket watches in a landscape setting. It is said that
the painting conveys several ideas within the image, chiefly that time is not
rigid and everything is destructible.
By the
mid-1930s, Salvador Dalí had become as notorious for his colorful personality
as his artwork, and, for some art critics, the former was overshadowing the
latter. Often sporting an exaggeratedly long mustache, a cape and a walking
stick, Dalí's public appearances exhibited some unusual behavior. In 1934, art
dealer Julian Levy introduced Dalí to America in a New York exhibition that
caused quite a lot of controversy. At a ball held in his honor, Dalí, in
characteristic flamboyant style, appeared wearing a glass case across his chest
which contained a brassiere.
Expulsion from
the Surrealists
As war
approached in Europe, specifically in Spain, Dalí clashed with members of the
Surrealist movement. In a "trial" held in 1934, he was expelled from
the group. He had refused to take a stance against Spanish militant Francisco
Franco (while Surrealist artists like Luis Buñuel, Picasso and Miró had), but
it's unclear whether this directly led to his expulsion. Officially, Dalí was
notified that his expulsion was due to repeated "counter-revolutionary
activity involving the celebration of fascism under Hitler." It is
also likely that members of the movement were aghast at some of Dalí's public
antics. However, some art historians believe that his expulsion had been driven
more by his feud with Surrealist leader André Breton.
Despite his
expulsion from the movement, Dalí continued to participate in several
international Surrealist exhibitions into the 1940s. At the opening of the
London Surrealist exhibition in 1936, he delivered a lecture titled
"Fantomes paranoiaques athentiques" ("Authentic paranoid ghosts")
while dressed in a wetsuit, carrying a billiard cue and walking a pair of
Russian wolfhounds. He later said that his attire was a depiction of
"plunging into the depths" of the human mind.
During World War
II, Dalí and his wife moved to the United States. They remained there until
1948, when they moved back to his beloved Catalonia. These were important years
for Dalí. The Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art in New York gave him his own
retrospective exhibit in 1941. This was followed by the publication of his
autobiography, The Secret Life of Salvador Dalí (1942). Also during
this time, Dalí's focus moved away from Surrealism and into his classical
period. His feud with members of the Surrealist movement continued, but Dalí
seemed undaunted. His ever-expanding mind had ventured into new subjects.
The Dalí
Theatre-Museum
Over the next 15
years, Dalí painted a series of 19 large canvases that included scientific,
historical or religious themes. He often called this period "Nuclear
Mysticism." During this time, his artwork took on a technical brilliance
combining meticulous detail with fantastic and limitless imagination. He would
incorporate optical illusions, holography and geometry within his paintings.
Much of his work contained images depicting divine geometry, the DNA, the Hyper
Cube and religious themes of Chastity.
From 1960 to
1974, Dalí dedicated much of his time to creating the Teatro-Museo Dalí (Dalí
Theatre-Museum) in Figueres. The museum's building had formerly housed the
Municipal Theatre of Figueres, where Dalí saw his public exhibition at the age
of 14 (the original 19th century structure had been destroyed near the end of
the Spanish Civil War). Located across the street from the Teatro-Museo Dalí is
the Church of Sant Pere, where Dalí was baptized and received his first
communion (his funeral would later be held there as well), and just three
blocks away is the house where he was born.
The Teatro-Museo
Dalí officially opened in 1974. The new building was formed from the ruins of
the old and based on one of Dalí's designs, and is billed as the world's
largest Surrealist structure, containing a series of spaces that form a single
artistic object where each element is an inextricable part of the whole. The
site is also known for housing the broadest range of work by the artist, from
his earliest artistic experiences to works that he created during the last
years of this life. Several works on permanent display were created expressly
for the museum.
Also in '74,
Dalí dissolved his business relationship with manager Peter Moore. As a result,
all rights to his collection were sold without his permission by other business
managers and he lost much of his wealth. Two wealthy American art collectors,
A. Reynolds Morse and his wife, Eleanor, who had known Dalí since 1942, set up
an organization called "Friends of Dalí" and a foundation to help
boost the artist's finances. The organization also established the Salvador
Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida.
Final Years
In 1980, Dalí
was forced to retire from painting due to a motor disorder that caused
permanent trembling and weakness in his hands. No longer able to hold a paint
brush, he'd lost the ability to express himself the way he knew best. More
tragedy struck in 1982, when Dalí's beloved wife and friend, Gala, died. The
two events sent him into a deep depression. He moved to Pubol, in a castle that
he had purchased and remodeled for Gala, possibly to hide from the public or,
as some speculate, to die. In 1984, Dalí was severely burned in a fire. Due to
his injuries, he was confined to wheelchair. Friends, patrons and fellow
artists rescued him from the castle and returned him to Figueres, making him
comfortable at the Teatro-Museo.
In November
1988, Salvador Dalí entered a hospital in Figueres with a failing heart. After
a brief convalescence, he returned to the Teatro-Museo. On January 23, 1989, in
the city of his birth, Dalí died of heart failure at the age of 84. His funeral
was held at the Teatro-Museo, where he was buried in a crypt.
Paternity Case
and New Exhibition
On June 26,
2017, a judge in a Madrid court ordered that Dalí’s body be exhumed to settle a
paternity case. A 61-year-old Spanish woman named María Pilar Abel Martínez
claimed that her mother had an affair with the artist while she was working as
a maid for his neighbors in Port Lligat, a town in northeastern Spain.
The judge
ordered the artist’s body to be exhumed because of a "lack of other
biological or personal remains" to compare to Martinez's DNA. The
Gala-Salvador Dalí Foundation, which manages Dalí’s estate, appealed the
ruling, but the exhumation went ahead the following month. In September,
results from the DNA tests revealed that Dalí was not father.
That October,
the artist was back in the news with the announcement of an exhibition at
the Dalí museum in Saint Petersburg, Florida, to celebrate his
friendship and collaboration with Italian fashion designer Elsa
Schiaparelli. The two were known for the joint creation of a "lobster
dress" worn by American socialite Wallis Simpson, who later married
English King Edward VIII.
Salvador Dali
Reviewed by Zhora aslanyan
on
November 28, 2017
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