We have been to the Dali museum and theater in Figueres, twice, and to the Casa Museu Castell Gala Dali in Pubol, and to the couple's seaside home at Port LLigat. We are, as I said in a previous post, qualified Dali fans. We like the intellectual aspects of his work, the playfulness, the parodies and allusions in art history, the technical prowess, the many dimensions and innovations of his work. We disregard the clownery, the personal life, the politics and theology. One has to do this with many of the great artists; e.g., Wagner. Anyhow, from Orlando it was easy to visit the other major Dali museum, in St. Petersburg. So our set is now complete. Plus we have seen many of his works at almost all the major museums of 20th century art we have visited in the past couple decades. FWIW, we thought the museum and tour far too serious, trying to convince us of the profundity of his work and the importance of the museum. We like Dali for the laughs, mostly. Compared with the sites in Spain, it seemed like a funeral home.
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Unadorned, unlike Figueres, etc. |
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In his prime, in the 50s; ever the showman |
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You exit through the gift shoppe at many museums, but at the Dali in St. Pete, they get you both coming and going; Dali would have liked that |
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Among the collaborations...a Marx brothers movie (Dali and Harpo were close personal buds); never got made; Groucho didn't think it was funny; MGM was not amused; wisely |
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Surreal deals |
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In addition to the paintings, Dali also wrote...essays, memoirs, a novel, poetry, screenplays, manifestoes, etc.) |
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I opened the book above to a random page, where you can see he fit right in with the French philosophers of his day... |
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Alas, I am no longer a suit, but I would have loved wearing one of these in the president's office at SMU |
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Gala being his wife, muse, financial manager... |
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The American couple, Reynolds and Eleanor Morse, whose Dali collection forms the basis of the museum |
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A replica of Dali's 1937 lobster telephone...from which, via the miracle of AI, you can ask Dali a question... see below |
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I asked what the final score of the Ohio State versus Notre Dame game would be, but did not get a helpful response |
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A bit of the museum interior...gift shoppe, Cafe Gala on the first floor, collections on the second |
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Ditto: The Ecumenical Council, 1960; Gala as St. Helen, Constantine's mom; Dali himself in a Velazquez/Las Meninas pose |
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Geopoliticus Child Watching the Birth of the New Man, 1943; the Americas and Africa surpassing the old world (Europe); symbolism and not a little didacticism |
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Nature Morte Vivante, 1956, expressing Dali's "atomic mysticism," whatever that was... |
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The Disintegration of the Persistence of Memory, 1954; referring to his most famous work, The Persistence of Memory, which we saw at the MoMA last fall; copies everywhere: everywhere... |
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The Discovery of America by Christopher Columbus, 1958-59; Dali's largest canvas, 13 feet high |
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Two views of the very famous and huge Abraham Lincoln portrait...this what my camera could see from a distance... |
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And this closer up; a better version is at one of our visits to the museo/teatro in Figueres; it really is stunning and unlike anything before it in art...an essay in art and perception |
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