...Salvador Dali was born in Figueres, Spain on May 11, 1904. He grew up middle class with his dad being a lawyer and his mother being a notary. His father raised his kid in a very strict discipline way. His mother enjoyed his art work when he was little. They say he was intelligent and a precocious child. He also had a lot of anger towards his parents and others like his school mates. His father did not tolerate that so he punished him a lot. Dali had an older brother who had the same first name as him, but sadly died from a gastroenteritis. He remembers that when he was about 5 year old that his parents took him back to his older brothers grave and told him that he was a reincarnation of his older brother which is kinda creepy. He had an older...
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...Hieronymus Bosch vs. Salvador Dali Thesis Statement: Hieronymus Bosch is like a 15th century version of Salvador Dali. Dali is a 20th century version of Bosch. The Idea of fantasy and surrealism has been around as long as man has. Hieronymus Bosch, famous for his fantastical, often monstrous, hybrid creatures, might in some ways be seen as a forerunner of the Surrealists. However, while the Surrealists played in the realms of dreams and the unconscious, Bosch was steeped in the religiosity of his age and the worlds he conjured up demonstrated what were believed to be the very real, and sobering, consequences of earthly behavior. The life of Bosch is an intriguing mystery – little is known of his early life, or where he studied in painting and arts. He wrote little in the form of letters and had no diaries accompanying his work – in fact all we know of him is either through his paintings, or through brief references to him through other people’s writing – we don’t even know for certain when he was born. Part of the Early Renaissance, Bosch lived all of his life in the Netherlands, and is known to have come from a family of artists and painters, though none of their works can be found today. But the mystery isn’t all that makes him so interesting – his art is a marvel to behold, and in my opinion his work is the most detailed and interesting I’ve ever seen. He was fond of triptychs, a series of paintings that slotted in beside each other to create a combined scene, the...
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...Salvador Dali The Disintegration of the Persistence of Memory MAKING: Select and write about ONE of the MAKING topics – process, education, materials or tools & technology – in 50-100 words. Salvador Dali used same painting elements as we all know today. If we would like to talk about his tools and techniques, the paintings are about “Hand-Painted Decam photographs”, he crisped about the details and used almost invisible brush work style. He gave importance to photographic realism. He contributed in the technical tradition of early Flemish and early Venetician painting. In his process, he used a jeweler’s glass for mainly close work, and small round gable brushes because of these, he had debt to Geargis de Chirico and Yvas Tanguy and they founded the use of perspective. STYLE: Choose and write about ONE of the STYLE topics – period, change, individuality or geography – in 50-100 words. Painted in 1931, The Persistence of Memory is one of the most celebrated and recognized paintings of the 20 th Century. The Persistence of Memory is filled with interesting and meaningful images even the ants, the fly, the olive tree, the steps, the amorphous shape on the beach but none are, nor ever have been, as compelling or as plump with significance as the watches themselves.Thus,it indicates his style to us. IDEOLOGY: In 50-100 words, write about the ideology that matches with your chosen work. It does not have to be an ideology discussed during the semester. In this...
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...His mother’s family are devout Catholics, but his father was a staunch atheist who sent him to the local state school to spare his son a Catholic education. The young Dali shared his father’s aversion. In 1929 to 1930 his films included scandalous portrayals of the priesthood as corrupt, ignorant and hypocritical. In 1929 Dali also drew a blasphemous image of the Christ and the sacred heart, which he entitled “Sometimes I spit with pleasure on the portrait of my mother to the anger and distress of this family.” Although he once blamed Catholicism for his profound sense guilt about sex, Dali’s attitude began shifting in America in the 1940’s. He came to believe in the possibility of a fusion between modern science, the mystery of religion and the traditions of classicism and began painting his wife Gala as a Renaissance Madonna. In 1949 Dali attended a private audience with Pope Pius XII. He announced himself a Catholic the next year. Dali spent his later years reconciling Catholic dogma with science in his...
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...The Dali Museum was reviewed on September 27, 2014. The reviewer attended the museum with his father. The museum is located in St. Petersburg, Florida. It is solely dedicated to Salvador Dali. Only Europe has a museum with a larger collection of Dali’s art. The Dali Museum is located on the waterfront of St. Petersburg, Florida. It is near the Albert Whitted Airport, which can be seen from the museum. Right at the entrance there is the “fountain of youth” and the living wall. On the opening floor there is a store, café, classroom, theatre, Raymond James Room, and a door that leads to a garden. In the store there is the “Rainy Rolls” which pays homage to Salvador Dali’s Rainy Taxi. The theatre is where they show a biography of Dali’s life....
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...gruesome Dada Art Movement reflected the current society’s state of mind. The Renaissance Art style reflected the common enlightenment of society, the embracing of new ideas whereas the Dada Art Movement of the early twentieth century reflected the grotesque effects that World War I had on the general public. However, the Surrealist Art Movement, developed from the Dada Art Movement, didn’t reflect a society’s state of mind. The Surrealist Art Movement emphasized self-expression and the exploration of the mind. The one who revolutionized this change in the usage of art is none other than the most influential Surrealist artist, Salvador Dali. Dali developed a unique art technique that consisted of manipulating the subconscious mind, allowing viewers to uniquely perceive his art in various ways. With his unique technique, the paranoiac critical method, Salvador Dali changed how the world perceived Surrealism by creating a distinction between a branch of Dadaism, Surrealism, and the previously renowned Dada art style itself: the elaborate use of the subconscious mind. The Dada Art Movement was the first global art movement that revolutionized how art would be perceived. The Dada Art movement was “founded in 1916 in Zunich by artists who fled their homelands during the first World War”, a time where war plagued the entire world (Hapgood 64). As a result of experiencing the dehumanizing effects of war first-hand, European artists began to reflect the loss of humanity and the dehumanization...
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...exist in our subconscious mind. He founded a group of artists focused on exploration of the world of dream and subconscious mind. On the beginning of the movement Breton defines principles of Surrealism in Manifesto of Surrealism. “Surrealism is based on the belief in the superior reality of certain forms of previously neglected associations, in the omnipotence of dream, in the disinterested play of thought. It tends to ruin once and for all other psychic mechanisms and to substitute itself for them in solving all the principal problems of life.” (Breton, 1969) Dali painting The Great Masturbator done in 1929, same time when he join Surrealists group and meet his future wife Gala. Painting is considered the first surrealist work, Dali symbolize his sexual fascinations, at the same time, highlights the mystical and sensual change that Hi had just gone through as a result of Gala’s presence in his life. (Leal, n.d.) For Dali masturbation and erotic fantasies were the only sexual experiences he accepted.” I masturbated frequently, but with great control over my penis, mentally leading myself on to orgasm but disciplining my actions so as the better to savour my ecstasy. Masturbation...
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...first founded by Andre Breton in his painting titled Manifesto of Surrealism. Along with Breton, many other artists who have used surrealism in their paintings have previously belonged to the Dada movement. Surrealism was practiced with the use of various forms of expression. Salvador Dali, for example, used dreamlike perceptions of space as well as dream inspired images in order to create surrealistic images. Such artists have been labeled by the name of "verists" because their paintings were perceived as transformations of the real world. Salvador Dali's contribution to the surrealistic world was a "paranoiac-critical method." As it is stated by Aaron Ross; "The paranoiac critical method provides a window into that unknown world of unconscious, and yet does not present the danger of psychic inundation". This method was responsible for Dali's famous double images. It required the artist to perceive and paint different images within a single shape. "Dali was capable of examining his own 'paranoiac' perceptions and interpretations" (Ross, 5). A perfect example which represents how many images are melted into one shape is Salvador Dali's painting titled The Great Masturbator. Through the use of surrealism, Dali was able to incorporate more than one image into one shape. Read more: http://www.ukessays.com/essays/arts/the-surrealism-art-movement-art-essay.php#ixzz3uARVB VIDEO Frank Sinatra HAPPY BIRTHDAY...
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...Salvador Dali had an improbable outlook on artistic creations and an amazing ability to create magnificent portraits. He began painting while in school, and much of his work was admired by his fellow students and teachers. It would be in 1931 when Dali would create one of his most memorable pieces of work to date –the Persistence of Memory. Dali, also created arts such as Metamorphosis of Narcissus in 1937 and The Elephants in 1948. The Metamorphosis of Narcissus retells the story of the tragic fate of Narcissus and Echo. Elephants on the other hand were specially selected animals which Dali used to contrast the difference between weight and structure, with the elephants carrying huge weight on their backs on top of brittle legs which were vastly elongated in order to substantially distort reality and strengthen the symbolism in his painting. Although Dali was a great artist, it was his unusual way of thinking and deep concern for dreams that gained him the most notoriety. Salvador Dali was born in 1904 in Figueres, Spain. In 1921, his mother passed away, and drew Dali closer to the arts. At first influenced by futurism, in 1924 Dalí came under the influence of the Italian painter de Chirico while in art school in Spain 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 with its strangely melting clocks. In 1940 Dalí escaped...
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...SURREALISM Appreciation of Art/Craft/Design 2011 Introduction Everybody has concept about Surrealism. But not everybody knows, how and why it has got art movement, when an artist is part of a movement like Surrealism, I ask a question for myself "Did Surrealism enter to our century?", if yes - "How?". In this essay I’ll discuss about social, economic and political influences of the time when movement born, what influenced this movement and what subsequent influence did this movement have on others? Also I discussion about of one artist who made major contribution to Surrealism - Salvador Dali (1904 - 1989) and try discuss about his artwork "Metamorphosis of Narcissus". Social, economic and political influences of time "Surrealism, was officially born in 1924 in Paris and had virtually become a global phenomenon by the time of it demise in the later 1940s" (Hopkins, 2004, p.15). It was difficult time for all world. Two wars: World War I (1914–1918) and World War II (1939–1945), Europe, as well as the United States, Canada, Australia, and Japan, would experience the effects of the Great Depression. "The early 20th century was a period of tumultuous change. The First World War and the Russian Revolution profoundly altered people’s understanding of their worlds. The discoveries of Freud and Einstein, and the technological innovations of the Machine Age, radically transformed human awareness" (Hopkins, 2004, p.20). Art movement - Surrealism There is an opinion...
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...Rachel Mendelson Final EssayArt Appreciation Fall 2012 Art Movement -Surrealism “Although the dream is a very strange phenomenon and an inexplicable mystery, far more inexplicable is the mystery and aspect of our minds confer on certain objects and aspects of life.” g. de Chirico Surrealism is a style of art in which the artist use the element of surprise and unexpected juxtapositions to evoke the imagination and mystery of the subconscious mind. Its intent was to create a liberated mind by the portrayal of everyday reality in an imaginative, dream-like manner. The surrealism art movement is one that included Freudian theories of the unconscious mind, and defy the standards society dictates through questioning what we know as logic, and exploring the fantasies of our imaginations. The surrealist movement, beginning in the 1920's, was based largely on the Dada movement preceding it and which produced works of art that deliberately defied reason. Surrealism developed primarily from the activities during World War I with the most important center of the movement beingParis. From the 1920s onward, the movement spread around the globe, eventually affecting the visual arts, literature, film, and music of many countries and languages, as well as political thought and practice, philosophy, and social theory. Surrealists feasted on the unconscious. They believed that Freud's theories on dreams, ego, superego and the id opened doors to the authentic self and a...
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...1920’s. Surrealism, as defined by the Collins English Dictionary, is: “a movement in art and literature in the 1920s, which developed especially [sic] from dada, characterized by the evocative juxtaposition of incongruous images in order to include unconscious and dream elements.” Although he was not limited to one particular style, or even one particular medium, no one artist is more identifiable with surrealist paintings than Salvador Dali. His surreal works, which he calls “hand-painted dream photographs,” are filled with images, often grotesque, over stretching landscapes which in and of themselves could send a viewer into a cycle of deep contemplation. Dali’s most famous painting of this type is The Persistence of Memory, oil on canvas, 1931. The small canvas, only 9½ x 13 inches, shows us images of melting pocket watches, a solid watch covered in ants, and a malformed “slug-like” creature lying on the ground. All this lay out on a beach landscape with illuminated, mountainous cliffs in the background. The drooping watches are, according to Dali, what Camembert cheese looks like when it begins to soften. Some theorize the watches represent a Freudian outlook on the passing of time and...
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...The man who drew this image is named Salvador Dali, and he drew it in 1969. The most modern of the three paintings brings a rather interesting story to it. This image was 1 of 21 engraving that Dali did directing a range of people. The first thing that caught my eye in this one is how childish it looks, thats the best way I can describe it. I know Dali was a very talented illustrator, but this image looks like something I could recreate with ease. I find this especially interesting because this is the most recent image of the three, but yet its the simplest. I think this is mainly because Dali wanted to take a completely different approach to drawing Faust, and this image accomplishes just that. While it does keep the dark feel, it adds a dream like feel because of how everything is floating on the picture. The technique being used here is a simplistic, but powerful image. There is no skull in this image, but I do feel like the figure to the right accomplish the same dark feel that the skull did in the other two images. Although the past to images kept the...
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...* Jonathan Haidt: The moral roots of liberals and conservatives In the first video Salvador Dali is used as an example of an artist who had an open mind. Although this was true, he was not clearly a "liberal" by Haidt's definition. I found it an interesting talk on the differences between liberals and conservatives in terms of importance of the 5 key values. One thing that stood out for me is the supposed rejection of authority by liberals as conservatives tend to crave authority not only for authority's sake, but so as to limit the authority they crave for their use against others. Nonetheless, there were many interesting ideas speculated in a brief lecture. * Greg Asner: Ecology from the air I love what was shown on the second video. Very interesting talk and very much informative. This talk about mapping the planet for information research on forests and structure date in a geographic context has the power to completely change our understanding of the ecosystems. Of course that will only be if the technology of the CAO is utilized to save what we have left. I think the talk could encourage everyone, including business crowd to realize the importance of preserving natural resources for the well-being of every specie and to sustain the cycle of life. * Sebastiao Salgado: The silent drama of photography I find this video as well as Sebastiao's photography to be highly inspirational. This was an amazing video showing people that we can make a difference and that...
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...Historia del Arte - Representantes del Arte Moderno I. Completa los datos de cada artista: 1. Pablo Picasso Estilo o movimiento artístico al que perteneció Cubismo Fecha y lugar de nacimiento Málaga, España – 25 de Octubre de 1881 Temas o características de sus obras - Buscaba retratar la realidad social. - Buscaba percibir de la naturaleza aquello que es impercedero y eterno, las formas esenciales y primitivas. - Se presentaro temas como la desgracias y el sufrimiento como reflejo de lo que Picasso vivía en ese momento. - Captaba las formas geométricas simples para evitar que en sus obras de reflejen sus estados de ánimos personales. - Se muestra una ruptura formal, que proviene por influencias del arte africano. - Decepción, sufrimiento y caos como reflejo de las distintas guerras que se estaban llevando a cabo a nivel mundial - Utilización de colores primarios, formas geométricas y mujeres sencuales. Incluye una de sus obras más famosas y describe brevemente el tema o características importantes de la misma Descripción: ‘La Guernica’ representa la guerra civil española. Se puede presentar temas como el sufrimiento y el dolor. Por otro lado, esto se ve representado por el tipo y tono de colores oscuros utilizados en la obra. Uno de los temas más importantes es el dolor y los sentimientos que involucran la guerra. 2. Claude Monet Estilo o movimiento artístico al que perteneció Impresionismo Fecha y lugar de nacimiento París, Francia – 14 de Noviembre...
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