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Salvador Dali
Salvador Dali
(1904 - 1989)

Spanish painter, graphic artist, filmmaker, writer.

A modern master of the surreal arts, Salvador Dali's works continually challenged convention by questioning the antithesis of surrealism: our normal sense of the "real."

Surrealism's objective was to make accessible to art the realms of the unconscious, irrational and imaginary. An expansive movement that extended beyond the canvas, Surrealism embraced literature, music, cinema, philosophy and popular culture. Dali's works drew inspiration from fellow Surrealists, such as Giorgio de Chirico, Max Ernst, Joan Miro...

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Dali
Title: Le Piano sous la niege (Piano under Snow)
Medium: Heliogravure w/ drypoint & hand-colored stencil
Size: 20" x 26.5"
Reference #: ML No. 156
 Year: 1966/67


   

Tauromachie Surréaliste  |  Dali  

Dali, who carried on a friendship with Pablo Picasso throughout their lives, transformed Picasso’s famous "Tauromaquia Suite" of 1957-59 which shows both the drama and the spectacle of the sport. Spanish-style bullfighting is normally fatal for the bull, and it is very dangerous for the matador. The aesthetic of bullfighting is based on the interaction of the man and the bull. Rather than a competitive sport, the bullfight is more of a ritual which is judged by aficianados (bullfighting fans) based on artistic impression and command. Ernest Hemingway said of it in his 1932 non-fiction book Death in the Afternoon "Bullfighting is the only art in which the artist is in danger of death and in which the degree of brilliance in the performance is left to the fighter's honour."
In these illustrations Dali has gone one step further than Picasso, as he also alludes to the arrogant Spanish court ceremonial and all forms of gruesome Catholic rite and "superstition."
This remarkable suite contains 7 etchings on Bond Paper and are hand-signed by the artist.

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