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Salvador Dalí (1904-1989). Salvador Dalí once stated that his purpose was to “systematize confusion and thus help discredit completely the world of reality.”. Salvador Dalí. Portrait of my Father (1920-21). Oil on canvas. Salvador Dalí. Cubist Self-portrait (1923). Gouache
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Salvador Dalí once stated that his purpose was to “systematize confusion and thus help discredit completely the world of reality.”
Salvador Dalí. Portrait of my Father (1920-21). Oil on canvas.
Salvador Dalí. Cubist Self-portrait (1923). Gouache and collage on card.
Salvador Dalí. The Breadbasket (1926). Oil on wood.
Salvador Dalí. Accommodations of Desire (1929). Oil on canvas.
Salvador Dalí. The Persistence of Memory (1931). Oil on canvas.
Salvador Dalí. The Shoe— Surrealist Object with Symbolic Function (1932). Assemblage of various materials.
Salvador Dalí. Lobster Telephone (1936). Telephone and plaster.
Salvador Dalí. Gala with the shoe hat made by Elsa Schiaparelli (1936).
Jean-Francois Millet. The Angelus (1857-59). Oil on canvas. Salvador Dalí. Gala and Millet’s Angelus (1933). Oil on wood.
Salvador Dalí. Face of Mae West (can be used as surrealist apartment), 1934-35. Gouache on newspaper.
Salvador Dalí. Soft Construction with Boiled Beans—Premonition of Civil War (1936). Oil on canvas.
Salvador Dalí. The Burning Giraffe (1936-37). Oil on wood.
Salvador Dalí. The Invention of the Monsters (1937). Oil on canvas.
Salvador Dalí. Swans Reflect Elephants (1936). Oil on canvas.
Salvador Dalí. The Metamorphosis of Narcissus (1937). Oil on canvas.
Drawings by Salvador Dalí for his exhibition catalogue at Julien Levy’s Gallery (1938).
Salvador Dalí. Slave Market with the Disappearing Bust of Voltaire (1940). Oil on canvas.
Detail from The Slave Market with Disappearing Bust of Voltaire
Salvador Dalí. Paranoiac critical method photo.
Salvador Dalí. The Passion of Saint Anthony (1946). Oil on canvas.
Salvador Dalí. Christ of Saint John of the Cross (1951). Oil on canvas.