Salvador Dali
By ESQ
Introduction
Salvador Dali was probably the most prominent and controversial figure associated with the Surrealist movement. Indeed, many would regard his name and brand of artistry as synonymous with Surrealism itself. It could be said that Dali was the most vivid, eccentric, flamboyant and self-indulgent of the Surrealists. Often times his popular and individual brand of surrealism (both provocative and exhibitionist in nature) exceeded much of the group’s ideology that brought criticism and ultimately even exclusion from within its own membership. Dali proved defiant even till the end but nevertheless regarded himself as the true surrealist. He was quoted as saying that, “The difference between the Surrealists and me is that I am a Surrealist”. However much criticized from without and within the Surrealist movement, Dali was indeed a tough act to follow. Beyond his widely renowned paintings, much less is known about Dali’s other pursuits in life. However, Kirsten Bradley enlightens us in her book Essential Dali that:
Not only was Dali a painter (and, of course, draftsman,
Illustrator, and printmaker) but he was also a sculptor,
a maker of objects, of ceramics, of furniture and of
jewelry; he was a film maker, theorist, novelist,
autobiographer and perhaps most crucially of all,
a master of self-publicity
Dali’s fame was indeed centered around his persona and egocentricity. His flair for the excessive and extravagant characterized his mastery of daily public demonstrations, sense of style and unceasing love of attention. Sacrificing few words Dali once said that, “Picasso is perhaps a minor painter, but he is the most destructive genius of modern times”. With Dali, “incessant controversy” seems to be the operative word of the day everyday. Dali’s most recognized and perhaps his most popular art piece is The Persistence of Memory, 1931. It was reportedly sold to a New York art dealer during a formal art exhibition in 1932 for $250.
Surrealism
Surrealism emerged in the early twenties between the two World Wars and was begun by Andre Breton with the publication of the Surrealist Manifesto in 1924. Some well known members of the surrealist group besides Dali and Breton included Jean Arp, Max Ernst, Andre Masson, Yves Tanguy, Joan Miro, Rene Magritte, Pierre Roy, and, Paul Delvaux. Surrealism has its roots in the outgrowth of the Dada art movement. Dadaism was founded during World War 1 (1914-1918) by Tristan Tzara and recognized as a movement that is “disillusioned by the massive destruction and loss of life brought about by the war, the dadaists’ motivations were profoundly political: to ridicule culture, reason, technology, even art”. Thereafter, the Dadaist sought to make a new beginning by “rejecting all accepted moral, social, political and aesthetic values” and in its place introduced all forms of media that would apparently shock societal values by making all known facets of live seem or at least portrayed to be absurd.
Whereas the Dadaist tradition exhibited a negative, subversive, destructive and nihilistic tendency towards discrediting and overthrowing the popular and conventional viewpoints arising out of justifications in favor of World War 1, as evident in its inherently nonsensical artistic display, Surrealism on the other hand, utilized positive expression in countering the “rationalism” of the time period. Surrealism was a means of reuniting conscious and unconscious realms of experience so completely, that the world of dream and fantasy would be joined to the everyday rational world in “an absolute reality, a surreality” Surrealism does not reject all social–political, psychological and philosophical issues by relegating them into non-understandable phenomenon unlike the Dadaists, but Surrealism tries to positively identify, embrace and incorporate in a constructive and enriching manner the framework of our social and political consciousness, even finding a place for the repressed unconscious psyche within the realm of conscious reasoning and interpretation. Surrealism strives to achieve a transcendence of the dialectical world of material objects and the metaphysical realm of concepts/consciousness through analysis and interpretation of the dialectical issues.
The Surrealist movement drew heavily upon the psychoanalytic theories advanced by the Austrian doctor Sigmund Freud who is regarded as the founder of psychoanalysis. To an extent, the psychology of Doctor Carl Jung was also instrumental to a certain surrealistic understanding. It is widely believed that two distinct groups of surrealists (the Automatist and Veristic) emerged from adopting the methodology of either Freud or Jung. The Automatist Surrealist with their notions of “free association” and influenced by Jung, subsumed consciousness in favor of the unconscious. Jung’s theory of the “collective unconscious” suppresses all conscious reason thereby defying rational knowledge in favor of the irrational. The unconscious overpowers the conscious and establishes itself as the base of all reality. Veristic Surrealism, on the other hand, was more aligned with Salvador Dali’s version of the “paranoiac-critical method” that was deeply influenced by Sigmund Freud’s theories as advanced in The Interpretation of Dreams in 1922. For the Veristic Surrealist, conscious reason interprets the unconscious realms of dreams and suppressed desires. Here, conscious interpretation comprehends and incorporates the unconscious in a reality that understands both realms in a controlled and critical manner.
Salvador Dali is the conscious and conscientious Surrealist who strives to understand the reality of the unconscious and the irrational. Dali tries to rationalize or understand the “irrational”, capture the essence of the “absurd”, and consciously tries to dissect the “unconscious”. Dali portrays himself as the extreme surrealist, the only “True Surrealist”, who daringly lives out his art form in a humanly conceived reality that is ultimately surreal. He was indeed a contradictory figure who loves to display himself as a true contradiction.
Facts on Dali
· 1904: Salvador Felipe Jacinto Dali was born in Figueras, Catalonia, Spain.
· 1922: Dali attends The Academy of Fine Arts in Madrid.
· 1923: Dali suspended from The Academy for inciting a student rebellion against school authorities.
· 1926: Dali expelled from The Academy for refusal to be examined in his final exam.
· 1929: Gala Eluard went into his life.
· 1930: Dali joined the group of Surrealists.
· 1931: Dali and Gala settle in Port Lligat.
· 1932: The Persistence of Memory is first exhibited.
· 1934: Dali and Gala are married.
· 1938: Dali introduced to Sigmund Freud.
· 1982: Gala died.
· 1989: Dali died.
Quotations
• “Surrealism is myself."
• “The difference between the Surrealists and me is that I am a Surrealist”.
• “Picasso is perhaps a minor painter, but he is the most destructive genius of modern times”.
• “Have no fear of perfection – you’ll never reach it.”
• “I believe that the moment is near when, by a procedure of active paranoiac thought, it will be possible to systematize confusion and contribute to the total discrediting of the world of reality.”
• “I have DalĂnian thought: the one thing the world will never have enough of is the outrageous.”
• “Paranoiac-critical activity makes the world of delirium pass onto the plane of reality...”
• “The difference between false memories and true ones is the same as for jewels: it is always the false ones that look the most real, the most brilliant
• “The only difference between myself and a madman, is that I am not mad!”
• “The only thing that the world will not have enough of is exaggeration.”
• “The world will admire me. Perhaps I’ll be despised and misunderstood, but I’ll be a great genius, I’m certain of it.”
• “There are some days when I think I’m going to die from an overdose of satisfaction.”
Robert Descharnes, Dali (New York: Abrams, 1985) 9.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Abrams, Harry. Dali: Great Modern Masters. Ed. Jose Faerna. Trans. Teresa Waldes. New York: Abrams, 1995.
Ades, Dawn. Dali’s Optical Illusions. New York: Athenum, 2000.
Bradbury, Kirsten. Essential Dali. London: Paragon, 2001.
Descharnes, Robert. Dali. Trans. Eleanor Morse. New York: Abrams, 1985.
Maddox, Conroy. Salvador Dali. West Germany: Taschen, 1990.
Preble, Duane and Sarah. Artforms. New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2002.
“Surrealism” Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia, 2003
http://www.encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/refarticle.aspx?ferid=761554397.
“Surrealism.com- The Definition of a Movement”
http://www.surrealist.com/new/default.asp.