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By Anne Umland
A fascinating and detailed analysis of one of the most iconic works of Surrealism
In 1931, Salvador Dal (190489) painted The Persistence of Memory, a work that has become virtually synonymous both with the artist and with Surrealism itself. In this bleak and infinite dreamscape, hard objects become inexplicably limp, while metal attracts ants like rotting flesh. Yet realistic details are included, too: the distant cliffs depict the coastline of Dals native Catalonia. Tapping deep into the non-rational mechanisms of his minddreams, the imagination and the subconscious and utilizing what he called the usual paralyzing tricks of eye-fooling, Dal claimed that he made this painting with the most imperialist fury of precision, but only to systematize confusion and thus to help discredit completely the world of reality. Curator Anne Umland unpacks this uncanny masterpiece, placing it within Dals long career as artist, author, critic, impresario and provocateur.