Mobile  |  About us  |  Photos  |  Videos  |  Subscriptions  |  RSS Feeds  |  Today's Paper  |  Classifieds  |  Contact Us
Advanced Search
The Daily Star
THURSDAY, 23 MAY 2013
03:53 AM Beirut time
Weather    
Beirut
23 °C
Blom Index
BLOM
1,211.5down
Art
Follow this story Print Email this RSS Feed ePaper share this
From Spain to Florida: new Dali exhibit begins
Associated Press
Dali’s “Bed and Two Bedside Tables Ferociously Attacking a Cello” is one of 12 works loaned for the exhibit.
Dali’s “Bed and Two Bedside Tables Ferociously Attacking a Cello” is one of 12 works loaned for the exhibit.
A+ A-

ST. PETERSBURG, Florida: In the mid-1920s, a young Salvador Dali was searching for his style.

He painted a startlingly lifelike basket of bread in a typical Renaissance form. He dabbled in cubism and painted in abstract black, white and gray. He also painted a scene in 1925 that he called “Desnudo en el Agua” (Nude in the Water), which gives an inkling of the surrealist genius to come.

The painting is a close-up of a woman’s shapely buttocks, and the unique perspective reveals that Dali was looking at subjects and paintings in a whole new way as a young artist.

“He’s not doing an academic perspective,” wryly notes Hank Hine, the director of the Salvador Dali Museum in St. Petersburg.

That subtly erotic work, along with 11 others, is on display at the Florida museum until March 31, 2013 in a show called “The Royal Inheritance: Dali Works From the Spanish National Collection.” The paintings, which span from 1918 to 1983, have never before been exhibited the United States.

The works that are displayed are on loan from the National Collection of Modern Art in Spain.

It’s an exhibit that merges the vast permanent collection housed in St. Petersburg – which was amassed by one couple from Cleveland who befriended the artist – with works owned by the Spanish Kingdom, which inherited Dali’s estate after he died in 1989.

For a visitor to the museum in St. Petersburg, it means a well-rounded and fun romp through Dali’s vast body of work.

Hine said the Florida museum was able to acquire the Spanish loans in exchange for collaborating on another Dali exhibition, one at the Centre Pompidou in Paris on Nov. 21. The show will also be shown in Madrid starting April 23, 2013.

“The world has a huge appetite for Dali,” said Hine.

“He’s lastingly exciting,” he added.

That appetite for his surrealist paintings, and the desire to see the striking new museum, has sparked an art renaissance in St. Petersburg. The museum moved into a $36 million glass-and-concrete building along the city’s waterfront on Jan. 11, 2011, and has welcomed an average of 1,000 people a day since opening.

The museum’s signature detail is a wave of glass paneling that undulates around the building – a feature that was designed by architect Yann Weymouth, who had a hand in creating the glass pyramid at the Louvre in Paris. There’s also a helix-like concrete staircase that stretches from the ticket counter to the third floor, and a cafe that serves smooth glasses of Spanish wine and traditional olives.

The biggest visitor demographic, Hine added, is the 18-30 age group – which is interesting considering that St. Petersburg has long been known as a retirement haven.

And 25 percent of the Dali exhibitions visitors have never been to a museum before, he continued.

“They don’t feel like they have to know anything about art to come here,” Hine said. “Dali’s works are whimsical, and charming.”

Even without knowing much about art, visitors can appreciate Dali’s genius, talent and, some would say, madness.

In the new exhibit, one of Dali’s paintings from late in his career – 1983’s “Bed and Two Bedside Tables Ferociously Attacking a Cello” – is a frenzy of strange. Two paintings from 1975-76 titled “Las Meninas” are Dali’s version of Velazquez’s timeless classic 17th century portrait of a young Spanish princess and her entourage; Dali recreated them in 3-D stereoscopic view. (Hint: look at both, cross-eyed).

There’s also a soft, traditional still life from 1918, painted when Dali was only 14.

That’s the beauty of the museum and the exhibit: the visitor learns that Dali wasn’t just a master of shocking images. He was a well-rounded, curious and prolific artist who constantly questioned everything – from religion to politics to his own memories.

The museum’s permanent collection, in the wing across from the temporary exhibit, holds some of Dali’s most important and popular works. There are the dripping watches, the marching ants, the sodomized pianos.

Dali had no connection to St. Petersburg and the museum’s collection of 100 of his works ended up there almost by accident.

The pieces were acquired by A. Reynolds and Eleanor Morse of Ohio, much to the surprise of their staid Midwestern friends and family, beginning with their first Dali purchase in 1942, a painting titled “Daddy Longlegs of the Evening-Hope!”

The couple became so enamored of Dali and his style that they eventually befriended the artist and his wife, Gala. Later they started looking for a home for the collection.

A. Reynolds Morse was willing to donate the works for free to any venue that would keep them together, and a St. Petersburg lawyer, Jim Martin, who read about the collection in a newspaper article, suggested St. Pete. The original museum was built in 1980.

“The Royal Inheritance: Dali Works From the Spanish National Collection” will be on display through March 31, 2013. On Dali Blvd., St. Petersburg. For more information see http://www.salvadordalimuseum.org or call 727-823-3767.

 
Home Art
 
     
 
United States of America
Advertisement
Around the Web
Comments  

Your feedback is important to us!

We invite all our readers to share with us their views and comments about this article.

Disclaimer: Comments submitted by third parties on this site are the sole responsibility of the individual(s) whose content is submitted. The Daily Star accepts no responsibility for the content of comment(s), including, without limitation, any error, omission or inaccuracy therein. Please note that your email address will NOT appear on the site.

comments powered by Disqus
Story Summary
In the mid-1920s, a young Salvador Dali was searching for his style.

The painting is a close-up of a woman's shapely buttocks, and the unique perspective reveals that Dali was looking at subjects and paintings in a whole new way as a young artist.

It's an exhibit that merges the vast permanent collection housed in St. Petersburg – which was amassed by one couple from Cleveland who befriended the artist – with works owned by the Spanish Kingdom, which inherited Dali's estate after he died in 1989 .

25 percent of the Dali exhibitions visitors have never been to a museum before, he continued.

Two paintings from 1975-76 titled "Las Meninas" are Dali's version of Velazquez's timeless classic 17th century portrait of a young Spanish princess and her entourage; Dali recreated them in 3-D stereoscopic view.

There's also a soft, traditional still life from 1918, painted when Dali was only 14 .

Dali had no connection to St. Petersburg and the museum's collection of 100 of his works ended up there almost by accident.
Related Articles
 
 
Choucair celebrated at Tate Modern
 
 
JABAL: Young and emerging artists occupy Beirut hotel
 
 
Van Gogh Museum reopens with display on his craft
 
 
Van Gogh Museum reopens after facelift
 
 
Louvre Abu Dhabi gives peek at its wide,varied collection
Show More
Entities
Advertisement
Most Popular
Viewed Searched e-mailed
1. Heavy clashes batter north Lebanon's Tripoli
 
2. Burial of Hezbollah fighter sparks tension in Sidon
 
3. General says Israel ready to attack Syria should Assad fall
 
4. SNC urges Syrian rebels to join Qusair battle
 
5. Iran's Ahmadinejad denounces election decision
 
6. Franjieh reiterates support for Assad, Hezbollah
Advertisement
Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Linked In Follow us on Google+ Subscribe to our Live Feed
Multimedia
Images  
Pictures of the day
A selection of images from around the world- Wednesday May 22, 2013
View all view all
Advertisement
Rami G. Khouri
Rami G. Khouri
A Hezbollah turning point in Qusair?
Michael Young
Michael Young
March 14 drifts away from the state
David Ignatius
David Ignatius
A struggle for positions precedes the Geneva conference
View all view all
Advertisement
cartoon
 
Click to View Articles
 
 
News
Business
Opinion
Sports
Culture
Technology
Entertainment
Privacy Policy | Anti-Spamming Policy | Disclaimer | Copyright Notice
© 2013 The Daily Star - All Rights Reserved - Designed and Developed By IDS