During my visit to the Museum of Modern Art, there were sculptures, artworks and architecture that would have made excellent selections to study and write about. However we interpret this small 9 ½ X 13 inch (24.1 x 33cm) work, its influence on the wider art world cannot be in doubt.įirst shown in Paris at Galerie Pierre Colle in 1931, the painting was also exhibited at the first Surrealist exhibition in the United States, at the Wadsworth Athenaeum, Hartford, Connecticut, in 1931, then, in 1934, by Julien Levy in New York.ĭalí and his wife Gala accompanied the painting over to New York in ’34, travelling third class with the financial assistance of Pablo Picasso.īy this point Dalí had been formally expelled from the Surrealists, partly due to his political opinions, but also thanks to his enthusiasm for American popular culture, something Breton and his fellow European Surrealists disdained.I have always wanted to learn about the history of art and the connotations artists attempt to convey through their works. “It is not unreasonable to associate the watches in The Persistence of Memory with ideas about the passage of time and the relation between actual time and remembered time,” writes Radford in our monograph, “but probably the dominant fascination for Dalí was the paradox of rendering the hardest, most mechanical of objects into its present soft, wilting form.” The title of the picture, too, offers some keys, as does the simple, technical challenges presented in such a composition. Salvador Dalí with his pet ocelot, Babou, 1965 Others have suggested that the deformed face in the centre is some kind of self-portrait. Many commentators have interpreted Dalí’s ants, a recurrent theme in his paintings, which can seen on the face of one of the painting’s pocket watches, as a symbol for decay. Though Dalí denied this, citing, instead a Camembert cheese he had seen melt in the sun as the inspiration for this central motif. Some have suggested that the watches refer to Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity. Yet, just as with the local mountains in the background, there are a few recongisable features in this work. The dripping watches and deformed face in this painting certainly look like an unalloyed expression of the subconscious. He even claimed to paint in a kind of self-induced hallucinatory state, which he called his ‘paranoiac-critical method’, enabling him to “systematize confusion and thus discredit completely the world of reality,” much to the delight of the French Surrealist co-founder Andre Breton. It also demonstrated his peerless grasp of Surrealism.ĭalí (left) and Man Ray in Paris, June, 1934ĭalí had officially joined the Surrealists in 1929, and remained intensely interested in the idea of subconscious art. The work not only displayed the 27-year-old painter’s technical proficiency and admiration for old masters – Dalí sported a pointed moustache in later life partly in tribute to Diego Velázquez. Yet it was these neighbouring mountains, in particular the craggy Cap de Creus peninsular and the nearby Mount Pani, that can be seen in his best-known work, painted while in this fishing village, which would make this poor artist a star: The Persistence of Memory.ĭalí created the famous work in 1931, completing it in August of that year. Penniless and outcast from the community which had inspired much of his art, the painter and his wife settled in a small fishing settlement, Port Lligat, buying a single-room fishing shack, where, “they had to suffer the damp walls and could mountain wind, the ‘tramontana’ which assails the region during the winter.” What’s more, this excommunication extended beyond his father’s house, as Robert Radford explains in our monograph, “a man of local influence let it be known that the ban extended to the whole village, and when Dalí insisted on returning he was snubbed and ignored in the streets.” This was hardship enough for the scandalous young painter, who, although part of the new Surrealist movement, had yet to find decent patronage among art dealers. On 28 December 1929, Salvador Dalí’s father threw the 25-year-old painter out of the family home. The Persistence of Memory (1931) by Salvador Dalí Salvador Dali's The Persistence of Memory explainedįind out how the Spanish Surrealist went from penniless painter to toast of the NYC artworld in one single canvas
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