Friday, October 9, 2009

It's in the Symbols:
Salvador Dali


The Soft Watches

One of Dali's most famous symbols in his
work: the soft watches. He takes the idea of a watch and bends its reality; watches have a hard surface and have a non-bendable outline, but Dali turns that reality on its head. Dali's watches bend and have a soft surface. The reality becomes surreal and the time becomes timeless. The idea of a soft watch points to time being relative and not fixed, like the watch is running out of the clock.

The Burning Giraffe

Dali conceived the idea of the burning giraffe when he was in Vienna in 1937. He felt the catastrophe that Hitler was going to create. So the symbol represents the male cosmic monster of the apocalypse.

The Elephants

The elephants in Dali's works have skinny, fragile, long legs. The feet
are always attached to the ground, but the legs always get longer and longer. This surreal symbol represents men shackled to the earth by gravity but always reaching for the higher places.

The Drawers

Dali said: "Freud's theory is like an allegory that illustrates and helps us to understand the countless narcistic smells that are released from the drawers." Inside of Dali's drawers are all the sins and complexes of men.

The Crutches

The use of crutches, to hold up objects and people in Dali's works, was Dali's way of symbolising our handicaps and weaknesses. But the crutches are also an instrument of art and intelligence that give the user the possibility to make superhuman performances.



The Egg

The egg is a Dalinian image that symbolises hope and love.





The Ants


Ants symbolise death, decay and an immense sexual desire.




The Butterfly


Butterflies were Dali's favorite symbol since the 1950's. The old Greek word, 'psyche', meant soul and butterfly.

4 comments:

  1. It's weird that people see the egg as a symbol of hope and love. While Dali said in "A Soft Self Portrait" that it stood for the fact that the inside of an egg is warm, squishylike and feels like the womb. While the hard shell and the cold outside represents the birth taking place, with pain and the cold world embracing him as he breaks out the egg. The egg comes out the Greek mythology, Leda

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