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Salvador Dalí
i Domènech
Figueres, 11 May 1904 - 23 January 1989
Salvador Dalí,
son of a prestigious Figueres notary public, devoted himself to drawing
and painting from a very early age, and in 1922 began studying Fine Arts
in Madrid. There, during his stay at the Residencia de Estudiantes, he
became firm friends with the poet Federico García Lorca and the
filmmaker Luis Buñuel, with whom he undertook many avant-garde
artistic projects.
Following his studies in Madrid and his participation in the renovating
artistic debates of the 1920s in Catalonia, Salvador Dalí moved
to Paris and joined the Surrealist group of painters and writers. From
this period date some of the works that were to make him one of the leading
representatives of Surrealism, such as The Great Masturbator, The Spectre
of Sex Appeal, The Lugubrious Game and The Persistence of Memory. In 1929
he met the young Russian Helena Ivanovna Diakonova, known as Gala, who
from that time onwards became his muse and partner.
Upon the outbreak of the Second World War, Salvador Dalí and Gala
set up home for a few years in the United States, where his realistic
yet dream-like painting met with huge success. It was during that period
that Dalí wrote The Secret Life of Salvador Dalí and worked
in the cinema, theatre, opera and ballet. From the 1940s date works as
important as Soft Self-Portrait with Fried Bacon, Basked of Bread, Leda
Atomica and The Madonna of Portlligat. Having by then become one of the
most famous painters of the time, in 1948 Dalí returned to live
in Europe and spent lengthy periods at his Portlligat house and studio.
During the 1950s and 1960s religion, history and science came to occupy
an ever-greater place among the themes of many of his works, many of them
in large format. Thus, over the course of these years, the artist painted
such famous works as Christ of St. John of the Cross, Galatea of the Spheres,
Corpus Hipercubus, The Discovery of America by Christopher Columbus and
The Last Supper.
During the 1970s Salvador Dalí created and inaugurated the Dalí
Theatre-Museum in Figueres, which houses a large collection of his works
ranging from his outset as an artist, through his creations within the
Surrealist school, to the works of his last period. After living for many
years in Portlligat, on the death of his wife Gala he went to live for
a time in Púbol Castle. He spent the last years of his life at
Torre Galatea in Figueres, near the Dalí Theatre-Museum, where
he left instructions to be buried. The Gala-Salvador Dalí Foundation
was created in 1983 as the institution which manages, protects and promotes
his artistic and intellectual legacy.
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