Dalí, Salvador
Related Category: European Art, 1600 to the Present: Biographies
(sälväthōr´ dälē´, dä´lē), 190489, Spanish painter. At first influenced by
futurism, in 1924 Dalí came under the influence of the Italian painter de
Chirico and by 1929 he had become a leader of
surrealism. His precisely realistic style enhances the obsessively nightmarish effect of many of his paintings. Among his best-known works is
Persistence of Memory (1931; Mus. of Modern Art, New York City) with its strangely melting clocks. In 1940 Dalí escaped from Nazi-occupied France and emigrated to the United States. He wrote
The Secret Life of Salvador Dalí (1942) and also made surrealist ventures in films (e.g., Luis
Buñuel's
Un Chien andalou, 1928), advertising, and the ballet. A self-proclaimed genius, Dalí was certainly a multitalented artista superb draftsman whose wildly inventive imagination has left a strong impression on contemporary culture. However, his publicity-seeking antics, commercialism, and encouragement of art-world trickery that made fake Dalí prints an industry caused some to brand him a charlatan. The Salvador Dalí Museum, St. Petersburg, Fla., and Teatre-Museu Dalí, Figueres, Spain, are devoted to his works.
Bibliography
See his diary, ed. by M. Déon (tr. 1965), Diary of a Genius (tr. 1994); C. Maurer, ed., Sebastian's Arrows: Letters and Momentos of Salvador Dalí and Federico García Lorca (2004); R. Descharnes and G. Neret, Dali: The Paintings (2 vol., 2004); biographies by I. G. De Liano (1984), R. Rom (1985), M. Etherington-Smith (1993), and I. Gibson (1998); studies by C. Lake (1969), H. N. Finkelstein (1996), R. Goff (1998), and R. Radford (1998).