Salvador Dalí:
Picture "The Hallucinogenic Torero" (1968-70), framed
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Picture "The Hallucinogenic Torero" (1968-70), framed
Salvador Dalí:
Picture "The Hallucinogenic Torero" (1968-70), framed

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limited, 499 copies | numbered certificate | reproduction, Giclée print on canvas | artist's varnish | on stretcher frame | framed | size 72 x 56 cm (h/w)

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Product no. IN-700023.R1

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Picture "The Hallucinogenic Torero" (1968-70), framed
Salvador Dalí: Picture "The Hallucinogenic Torero" (1968-...

Detailed description

Picture "The Hallucinogenic Torero" (1968-70), framed

The picture is a combination of various elements from Dalí's paranoiac-critical period. Dalí presents himself as the contemplating boy in the upper left corner. Dalí places the classical Greek Venus as a sign of love without original sin in a bullfighting stadium, where love fights with modern science. But love prevails.
Original: Dalí Museum, St. Petersburg, Florida.

Our high-quality art reproduction is worked by hand in a patented process on artist canvas and traditionally mounted on a wooden stretcher frame. The motif surface with tactile and visible linen structure and additionally hand-applied brush texture underlines the painting-like effect. Finally, the picture is sealed with an artist's varnish for protection. Limited edition of 499 copies, with a numbered certificate on the back. In handmade real wood gallery frame. Size 72 x 56 cm (h/w).

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Portrait of the artist Salvador Dalí

About Salvador Dalí

1904-1989 - Artist of the century from Spain, the main representative of Surrealism

His provocations shocked the art world, his visions thrilled the crowds. Salvador Dalí was undoubtedly one of the most enigmatic personalities in art history. Whether as a painter, graphic artist, illustrator, sculptor, stage director or writer - Dalí always broke new ground and set standards for existing and future generations.

For Salvador Dalí, painting is the visualisation of his imagination, which is stimulated by a reality he has created himself. For him, dreams and hallucinations are the real world. The subject matter of his works is characterised by constant self-exploration and the influence of Freud's psychoanalysis.

The main representative of Verist surrealism began his training at the Madrid Academy but was expelled from it for his rebellious behaviour. However, he continued to study the paintings of old masters, whose motifs can be found in his own works. His early work was influenced by Cubism and Italian Futurism.

Through Miró's mediation, he joined the Surrealist circle in 1928. There he met Gala, the muse of the Surrealists. She became his partner and the model for numerous paintings.

The versatile artist was not only concerned with painting and sculpture but also with film. Together with Buñuel, he made the short film "Un Chien Andalou" (An Andalusian Dog) in 1929. His first book followed a year later, in which he explained his "paranoiac-critical method".

In 1940, Dalí went to the USA for eight years and worked there mainly in the fashion and advertising industries. Returning to Spain, he professed Catholicism and added more and more religious and mythological themes to his work.

The bizarre forms and figures in his paintings often deviate from reality and are combined with absurd combinations of objects to create a fantastic dream world. Yet despite all this, they possess an astonishing realism. For Salvador Dalí, an essential element of his art and his behaviour was staged provocation.

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