|
Published on Taipei Times http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2001/02/04/72348 Palace Museum becomes surreal Over 70 works by the surrealist master Salvador Dali add an unusual strangeness to the typically staid art institution
By Chang Ju-ping
Dali is often grouped with Joan Miro and Pablo Picasso as among the best three Spanish artists of the last century and the Palace Museum is privileged to have 38 oil paintings, 47 watercolor and drawings on loan from the Dali Theater Museum of Figueres, courtesy of the Gala Salvador Dali Foundation.
While the palace museum is traditionally a venue to display classic Chinese and Asian art, museum director Du Cheng-sheng ( Dali displays more provincialism in his works than his peers such as Picasso. He wrote art criticism in Catalan, the local language of his hometown Figueres, where he lived his whole life except for eight years spent in the US between 1940-1948. Despite the regional elements of his work, Dali came to be known internationally as a major artist.
Dali was, for a period, a leading member of the surrealist movement, which began in France in 1920 and was championed by the writer Andre Breton and the painter Rene Magritte. The style was characterized by its subversive investigations into the relationship between dreams and reality, inspired in large part by Freudian psychoanalysis. Dali became known for filling his canvasses with nightmarish, irrational dreamscapes that hint at the subconscious, and broach such taboo topics as sex and death.
In this painting, the melting clock -- inspired originally by melting Camembert cheese -- is placed to the right of a ghostly-looking woman on a red sofa. The image of the melting clock evokes the concept of a distortion of time, a concept which is typically viewed as rigid and linear. The woman, who lacks facial features, but has straw-like hair, appears to be singing. The image is horrifying, not unlike Dali's other depictions of women, who often have drawers extending from their bodies. The drawers are another form of Dali's exploration of psychology.
Willington Lee (
A series of seminars has been arranged to accompany the Dali show before it moves on to Shanghai in May. The first discussions is on Feb. 16 with psychiatrist Wang Hao-wei (
For more information on the seminars, call 273-6000 ext 1301 or 1302.
|