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The Elephants Artist Salvador Dalí Year 1948 Medium Oil on canvas Movement Surrealism Dimensions 49 cm × 60 cm (19 in × 24 in) Location Private collection The Elephants is a 1948 painting by the Catalan surrealist artist Salvador Dalí. Background The elephant is a recurring theme in the works of Dalí, first appearing in his 1944 work Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a ...
In Metamorphosis, the reflection of Narcissus is used to mirror the shape of the hand on the right of the picture. Here, the three swans in front of bleak, leafless trees are reflected in the lake so that the swans' necks become the elephants' trunks, the swans' bodies become the elephants' ears, and the trees become the legs of the elephants.
A parade of elephants led by a horse approach St. Anthony. The horse is a depiction of Satan (note the reverse of the hooves); many artists of the Middle Ages depicted anything other than Christian as upside down or reverse, and Dalí did the same here, but the horse as Satan was described by Dalí as beautiful, terrible and impossible.
Metamorphosis of Narcissus is an oil-on-canvas painting by the Spanish surrealist Salvador Dalí, from 1937.Originally titled Métamorphose de Narcisse, [1] This painting is from Dalí's paranoiac-critical period and depicts his interpretation of the Greek myth of Narcissus.
During the 1950s, Dalí painted many of his subjects as composed of rhinoceros horns. Here, the young virgin's buttocks consist of two converging horns and two horns float beneath; "as the horns simultaneously comprise and threaten to sodomise the callipygian figure, she is effectively (auto) sodomised by her own constitution."
The Cheerful Horse (1980) Dalí Theatre and Museum, Figueres, Spain; Group Surrounding a Reclining Nude – Velazquez (1980–81) Sleeping Young Narcissus (1980) Untitled (Bridge with Reflections; sketch for a dual image picture, unfinished) (1980) Untitled (Landscape with Celestial Beings) (1980) The Harmony of the Spheres (1980)
The year prior to painting the Persistence of Memory, Dali developed his "paranoiac-critical method," deliberately inducing psychotic hallucinations to inspire his art. He remarked, "The difference between a madman and me is that I am not mad." This quote highlights Dali's awareness of his mental state.
Enigmatic Elements in a Landscape (Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalí, Figueres) Spectre of Vermeer's Chair (private collection) [5] Dalí revered Vermeer, and also drew several times on his The Lacemaker, for instance in Paranoiac-Critical Study of Vermeer's Lacemaker. [6] Dali also painted a copy of The Lacemaker on commission from collector ...