Salvador Dali is considered as the greatest artist of the
surrealist art movement and one of the greatest masters of art
of the twentieth century. During his lifetime the public got a
picture of an eccentric paranoid.
His personality caused a lot of controversy.
After his death in
1989 his name remained in the headlines. But this time
it was not funny at all. The art market was shaken by reports
of great numbers of fraudulent Dali prints.
What's all behind it?
The Prodigy Child without an Exam
Salvador Dali was born as the son of a prestigious notary in the
small town of Figuera in Northern Spain. His talent
as an artist showed at an early age and Salvador Felipe
Jacinto Dali received his first
drawing lessons when he was ten years old. His art teachers
were a then well known
Spanish impressionist painter, Ramon Pichot and later
an art professor at the Municipal Drawing School. In 1923
his father bought his son his first printing press.
Dali began to study art at the Royal Academy of Art in
Madrid. He was expelled twice and never took
the final examinations.
His opinion was that he was more
qualified than those who should have examined him.
Surreal Art
In 1928 Dali went to Paris where he met the
Spanish painters
Pablo Picasso and
Joan Miro. He established
himself as the principal figure of a group
of surrealist artists grouped around Andre Breton, who was
something like the theoretical "schoolmaster" of
surrealism.
Years later Breton turned away from Dali accusing him of
support of fascism, excessive self-presentation and
financial greediness.
By 1929 Dali had found his personal style that should
make him famous - the world of the unconscious that
is recalled during our dreams. The surrealist theory is
based on the theories of the psychologist Dr. Sigmund
Freud.
Recurring images of burning giraffes and melting
watches became the artist's surrealist trademarks. His great
craftsmanship allowed him to execute his paintings in a
nearly photorealistic style. No wonder that the artist
was a great
admirer of the Italian Renaissance painter Raphael.
Dali and Gala
Meeting Gala was the most important event in the artist's life
and decisive for his future career.
She was a Russian immigrant and ten years older than Dali.
When he met her, she was married to the famous French poet, Paul Eluard.
Gala decided
to stay with Dali. She became his companion, his
muse, his sexual partner, his model in numerous
art works and his business manager. For
him she was everything. Most of all Gala was a stabilizing
factor in his life. And she managed his success in the
1930s with exhibitions in Europe and the United States.

Gala was legally divorced from her husband in 1932.
In 1934 Dali and Gala were married in a civil ceremony in
Paris and in 1958 in church after Gala's former husband
had died in 1952.
However from around 1965 on, the couple was seen less frequently
together. But Gala continued to manage Dali's business
affairs.
In the U.S.A.
In 1933 Salvador Dali had his first one-man show in
New York. One year later he visited the U.S. for the
first time supported by a loan of US$500 from Pablo Picasso.
To evade World War II, Dali chose the U.S.A.
as his permanent residence in 1940. He had a series of
spectacular exhibitions, among
others a great retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art
in New York.
Besides creating a number of great paintings,
Dali caused the attention of the media by playing the
role of a surrealist clown. He made a lot of money and
was contemptuously nicknamed Avida Dollars (greedy
for dollars) by Andre Breton.
Dali became the darling of the American High
Society. Celebrities like Jack Warner or Helena
Rubinstein gave him commissions for portraits.
His art works became a popular trademark and
besides painting he pursued other activities - jewelry
and clothing designs for
Coco Chanel or film making with Alfred Hitchcock.
The Classic Period After World War II
In 1948 Dali and Gala returned to Europe, spending most
of their time either in their residence in Lligat/Spain or
in Paris/France or in New York.
Dali developed a lively interest in
science, religion and history. He integrated things
into his art that he had
picked up from popular science
magazines. Another source of inspiration
were the great classical masters of painting like Raphael,
Velasquez or the French painter Ingres.
The artist commented his shift in style with the words: "To be
a surrealist forever is like spending your life painting
nothing but eyes and noses."
In 1958 the artist began his series of large sized
history paintings. He painted one monumental painting
every year during the summer months in Lligat. The most
famous one, The Discovery of America by Christopher
Columbus, can be seen at the Dali Museum in
St.Petersburg in Florida. It is breath-taking.
The artist's late art works combine more than ever his perfect and meticulous
painting technique with his fantastic and limitless
imaginations.
Death in His Own Museum
Salvador Dali is the only known artist who had two
museums
dedicated exclusively to his works in his lifetime.
- The Dali Museum in St. Petersburg in Florida/U.S.A.
This art museum was founded in 1971 by the Dali collector A. Reynolds
Morse and his wife Eleanor. The collection was first
exhibited in a building adjacent to their
home in Cleveland/Ohio. In 1982, the museum was moved to
St. Petersburg in Florida. It hosts 95 oil paintings
including six of Dali's eighteen large-sized historical
paintings.
- Dali Museum-Theater in Figueres, Spain
The Museum was the former Municipal Theater of Figueres.
In 1918, when
Salvador Dali was only fourteen years old, it had shown his first
public exhibition.
From 1970 the artist dedicated his energy to
transforming the former Municipal Theater into
a museum and art gallery.
In 1974 the Theatro Museo Dali was officially opened.
In 1980 Dali was forced to retire due to palsy, a
motor disorder, that caused a permanent trembling and
weakness of his hands. He was not able to hold a brush any
more. The fact that he could not follow his vocation and
passion of painting and the news of Gala's death in 1982
left him with deep depressions.
After Gala's death he moved to Pubol, a castle, he had
bought and decorated for Gala. In 1984, when he was
lying in bed,
a fire broke out and he suffered
sever burns. Two years later, a pacemaker had to
be implanted.
Towards the end of his life, Dali lived in the tower of his
own museum where he died on January 23, 1989 from heart
failure.
In 1949 his sister Ana Maria published a book about
her brother,
Dali As Seen By His Sister describing
his youth as very normal and happy.
The great surrealist master was furious and
outraged and created a painting that
can only be called a vulgar revenge against his sister.
In an interview with a news magazine in July 2000,
Robert Descharnes, his long-time secretary, described
the artist as a rather normal person.