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Price: $415
 
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Salvador Dalí Chien

Limited Edition: 25 Banners
Price: $415

Museum: Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Exhibition: Dalí: Painting & Film
Material: Printed 2-ply vinyl
Dimensions: L: 96 " (244 cm) : W:35 " (89 cm)

Description: Spanish surrealist Salvador Dalí painted dream worlds of his own creation. Barren landscapes dotted with melting clocks and silly-puttyesque nudes were par for the course. The recent exhibition Dalí: Painting and Film, however, explored the closely intertwined relationships of his painted images to "moving" pictures. As a lover of film as well an occasional screenwriter, filmmaker and art director, it is not surprising that Dalí would embrace this new medium in his own unique way.

Beginning in the late 1920s, Dalí started to collaborate with his friend and fellow Spaniard Luis Buñuel (1900-1983) to create silent, black-and-white short films with hauntingly surreal imagery. Their first collaboration in 1929 lead to Un Chien Andalou (An Andalousian Dog). In the opening scene of the 16-minute film, a man hold’s open a woman’s eye and proceeds to slice it with a razor. This sadistic act is a key element of the “plot” of the film, as the man seems to be the woman’s husband and there is a potential “lover” afoot. Of course, there is no direct plot line in these Dalí/Buñuel collaborations, and both time and imagery reamain mercilessly at play throughout.

It is a close up image of the woman’s face that is featured on these banners. The woman’s unemotional face with her eye held open by the man’s hands is repeated three times, as if a flickering piece of film. At the bottom of the banner, a narrow black band features white text that reads “LACMA/October 24, 2007 – January 6, 2008”. The other side of the banner is black with white text that reads “Dali/Painting & Film”. Another banner from the exhibition makes a perfect companion to this one, showing Dali’s exploration of the human eye in his painting Spellbound.
Provenance: These banners were displayed around Los Angeles from October 14, 2007 through January 6, 2008 to promote the exhibition, Dalí: Painting & Film at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The exhibition was also shown at The Museum of Modern Art, the Tate Modern, and the Salvador Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida.
About the Artist: Spanish artist Salvador Dalí (1904-1989) never limited his career to a particular style or medium. His earliest works reflect an Impressionist bent; his most well-known works are firmly in the Surrealist realm; and his later works tend more toward the classical. He was ever-exploring and ever-evolving, leaving behind a vast body of work including oils, watercolors, drawings, graphics, sculptures, films, photographs, performance pieces, jewels and other objects.

Color Scheme: Black & White -
Style: Video - Surrealism - Modern -
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