Salvador Dali Biography
Salvador Dalí was born in Figueras, Catalonia, in 1904. He was both artistic
and eccentric from an early age. He later claimed that the death of his older
brother, also called Salvador, nine months before he was born, contributed to
his intense desire for attention and bizarre behaviour.
Dalí began studying at the San Fernando Academy of Fine Arts in Madrid in
1921, but was expelled 3 years later for rebellious behaviour. This included
refusing to take an examination because he felt that the teachers were not
qualified to judge his work. However, his talent had already earned him a
successful one-man show at the Galeria Dalmau in Barcelona.
Dalí experimented with various styles but settled on Surrealism. He made the
first Surrealist film, Un Chien Andalou, in 1929. During the next few years,
Dalí painted some of his most famous pictures. The Persistence of Memory, from
1931, is on display in the Museum of Modern Art in New York. His works were
filled with bizarre double images and he used a detailed, realistic technique to
create imaginative scenes that he called his ‘hand-painted dream photographs’.
In 1936, he attended the International Surrealist Exhibition in London and gave
a lecture dressed in a diver's suit. This was just one of his publicity stunts.
In 1939, Dalí quarrelled with the founding father of Surrealism, Breton, and was
officially expelled from the movement. However, he had already begun to produce
more naturalistic pieces due to the Renaissance art that he saw on his numerous
visits to Italy. He left Europe when war broke out, and lived in America until
1948. During this time he produced numerous paintings, and the first of his
colourful autobiographies, The Secret Life of Salvador Dalí. He also became
involved in design work, including a dream sequence for Alfred Hitchcock’s 1945
film, Spellbound.
Dalí’s later paintings included strongly sexual pieces featuring his wife, and
also religious works. Of these, the Christ of St John of the Cross is on display
in the St Mungo Museum, Glasgow. It was bought by Glasgow City Art Gallery in
1952, and was highly controversial because of its excessively high price. Other
religious works include Crucifixion, which is on display at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art in New York and The Sacrament of the Last Supper that hangs in the
National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.
Dalí produced the second of his autobiographical works, entitled, Diary of a
Genius, in 1964. However, towards the end of his life, Dalí became a recluse. He
died in 1989. Two museums are dedicated to his work. The Teatre-Museu Dalí, was
established in Figueras, Spain, in 1974, and the Salvador Dalí Museum, in St
Petersburg, Florida, was established in 1982.
Throughout his life, Dalí was a painter, draughtsman, printmaker, designer,
sculptor, film-maker, and writer. He was also one of the leading figures in
Surrealism. However, it was none of these, but it was actually his enormous
talent for self-publicity that made him an international celebrity.
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