“My best ideas com[e] through my dreams.” — Salvador Dalí
The artist, author, critic, impresario, and provocateur Salvador Dalí burst onto the art scene in 1929 and rarely left the public eye until his death six decades later. The auspicious occasion was the debut in Paris of Un Chien Andalou, a film Dalí made in collaboration with Luis Buñuel. Filmed in Paris, Un Chien Andalou strung together free-associative vignettes and made full use of the avant-garde technique of montage, including, most famously, a scene of a razor slicing into a woman’s eye. The film catapulted Dalí to the center of the Surrealist community. An artistic and intellectual movement begun by André Breton in 1924, Surrealism championed the unconscious as the primary motor of human behavior, coupling this with an aspiration to political revolution. Although Dalí’s association with Surrealism was late-coming and short-lived (he would be expelled from the group in 1934), his arrival jolted new life into the movement. Dalí’s chief theoretical contribution to Surrealism was his elaboration, in the early 1930s, of the “paranoiac-critical method”—a process, he wrote, to “systematize confusion and thereby contribute to a total discrediting of the world of reality.” The method described a deliberately disoriented state of mind that would allow an individual to connect unrelated things, forging fresh avenues of thought and creation. Around the same time, he also published several essays naming and defining the so-called “Surrealist object”: an object “functioning symbolically,” usually constructed from found items or readymade materials, and redolent with psychological power. His Retrospective Bust of a Woman was one such object. Beneath its seemingly haphazardly embellished portrait bust of a woman pulsed a rich network of associations, from references to consumption (corn cobs and a baguette) to putrefaction (an ant swarm, a recurrent motif in Dalí’s work). The Persistence of Memory, perhaps his most famous painting, was an overnight sensation on its first exhibition in New York, in January 1932. (It had remained unsold when first exhibited in Paris the previous summer.) The gallerist and early champion of the Surrealists Julien Levy proclaimed the painting “10 by 14 inches of Dalí dynamite,” and an image of it was reproduced in nearly every review. Years later, Dalí would recount its genesis, claiming that the “soft watches” had their origin in the remains of a “very strong Camembert” cheese. Rendered with the artist’s meticulous attention to detail, the painting’s three pocket watches hang flaccidly from a denuded tree branch, a ledge, and a bestial form that, on closer examination, resembles Dalí’s own distorted face. As sunlight hits the distant cliffs and glassy water, ants teem on the surface of the single closed watch, and a fly alights nearby—suggesting rot and waste in an otherwise pristine landscape. With its uncanny juxtaposition of the ordinary and the bizarre, and its suggestion of time arrested or out of sync (the watches all point to different numbers), The Persistence of Memory possesses an eerily dreamlike quality. It showcases Dalí’s interest in exploring how the mind interprets reality and the primacy of sexuality to the human psyche—lines of inquiry that would remain constant throughout his career.
Note: Opening quote is from the Mike Wallace Interview Collection. “Interview with Salvador Dalí.” Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin, April 19, 1958. https://hrc.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15878coll90/id/58/rec/59.
Natalie Dupêcher, independent scholar, 2017
Works in Collection
85 works
Artine
Salvador Dalí
1930
Cavalier of Death
Salvador Dalí
1934
Debris of an Automobile Giving Birth to a Blind Horse Bit...
Salvador Dalí
1938
Dormeuse, Cheval, Lion, etc.... Invisibles (plate, page 1...
Salvador Dalí
1930
Frontispiece (plate, page 6) from La Femme Visible (The V...
Salvador Dalí
1930
Frontispiece for Second Surrealist Manifesto
Salvador Dalí
1930
Frontispiece from Les Chants de Maldoror (The Songs of Ma...
Salvador Dalí
1934
Frontspiece (plate, page 6) from La Femme Visible (The Vi...
Salvador Dalí
1930
Grain and Chaff (Grains et issues) from Grains et issues
Salvador Dalí
1935
Groupe Allégorique (plate, page 27) from La Femme Visible...
Salvador Dalí
1930
Headpiece (page 113) from Les Chants de Maldoror (The Son...
Salvador Dalí
1934
Headpiece (page 143) from Les Chants de Maldoror (The Son...
Salvador Dalí
1934
Headpiece (page 175) from Les Chants de Maldoror (The Son...
Salvador Dalí
1934
Headpiece (page 37) from Les Chants de Maldoror (The Song...
Salvador Dalí
1934
Headpiece (page 5) from Les Chants de Maldoror (The Songs...
Salvador Dalí
1934
Headpiece (page 87) from Les Chants de Maldoror (The Song...
Salvador Dalí
1934
Illumined Pleasures
Salvador Dalí
1929
In-text plate (page 27) from Manifeste Mystique (Mystic M...
Salvador Dalí
1951
La Chasse aux Papillons (plate, page 53) from La Femme Vi...
Salvador Dalí
1930
La Femme Visible (The Visible Woman)
Salvador Dalí
1930
Les Chants de Maldoror (The Songs of Maldoror)
Salvador Dalí
1934
Limp Cranes and "Cranian" Harp
Salvador Dalí
1935
Maison Modern-Style (Domenech I Muntaner, Arch. Barcelone...
Salvador Dalí
1930
Maison Modern-Style (Figueras) (plate, page 69) from La F...
Salvador Dalí
1930
Exhibitions
59 exhibitionsJul 10, 1933 – Sep 30, 1933
Summer Exhibition: Painting and Sculpture
48 artists
Oct 03, 1933 – Oct 27, 1933
Modern European Art
53 artists
Nov 19, 1934 – Jan 20, 1935
Modern Works of Art: 5th Anniversary Exhibition
117 artists
Jun 04, 1935 – Sep 24, 1935
Summer Exhibition: The Museum Collection and a Private Collection on Loan
53 artists
Apr 27, 1936 – Sep 02, 1936
Modern Painters and Sculptors as Illustrators
100 artists · 1 curator
Dec 07, 1936 – Jan 17, 1937
Fantastic Art, Dada, Surrealism
179 artists · 1 curator
Jun 23, 1937 – Nov 04, 1937
Summer Exhibition: Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection and on Loan
53 artists
Oct 08, 1937 – Nov 13, 1937
New Acquisitions: Dalí, Henry Moore, Chaim Gross
3 artists
May 10, 1939 – Sep 30, 1939
Painting, Sculpture, Prints
154 artists
Oct 23, 1940 – Jan 12, 1941
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
80 artists
Dec 27, 1940 – Jan 12, 1941
We Like Modern Art
32 artists
May 06, 1941 – Apr 30, 1941
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
74 artists
Aug 04, 1941 – Oct 15, 1941
Techniques of Painting
16 artists
Aug 26, 1941 – Sep 15, 1941
Ancestral Sources of Modern Painting
26 artists
Nov 19, 1941 – Jan 11, 1942
Salvador Dalí
1 artist · 1 curator
Dec 09, 1942 – Jan 24, 1943
Twentieth Century Portraits
159 artists · 1 curator
Feb 16, 1944 – May 10, 1944
Modern Drawings
120 artists · 3 curators
May 24, 1944 – Oct 15, 1944
Painting, Sculpture, Prints
133 artists · 1 curator
May 24, 1944 – Sep 17, 1944
Dance and Theatre Design
46 artists
Mar 06, 1945 – Mar 25, 1945
What is Modern Painting?
37 artists
Jun 20, 1945 – Feb 13, 1946
The Museum Collection of Painting and Sculpture
174 artists
Sep 19, 1945 – Nov 25, 1945
Costume Carnival
8 artists
Feb 19, 1946 – May 05, 1946
The Museum Collection of Painting
67 artists
Jul 02, 1946 – Sep 22, 1946
Paintings from New York Private Collections
37 artists · 1 curator
Jul 02, 1946 – Sep 12, 1954
Paintings, Sculpture, and Graphic Arts from the Museum Collection
112 artists · 1 curator
Apr 15, 1947 – Jun 01, 1947
Drawings in the Collection of The Museum of Modern Art
83 artists
Sep 21, 1948 – Dec 05, 1948
Collage
39 artists · 1 curator
Oct 01, 1948 – Oct 31, 1948
Print Gift of Victor S. Riesenfeld and Matisse: Jazz: Gift of the Artist
31 artists · 1 curator
May 10, 1949 – Jul 10, 1949
Master Prints from the Museum Collection
132 artists · 2 curators
Oct 05, 1949 – Dec 04, 1949
Modern Art in Your Life
164 artists · 1 curator
Jul 11, 1950 – Sep 05, 1950
Three Modern Styles
94 artists
Aug 29, 1950 – Oct 15, 1950
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
72 artists · 1 curator
Oct 19, 1954 – Feb 06, 1955
XXVth Anniversary Exhibition: Paintings from the Museum Collection
260 artists
Dec 07, 1954 – Feb 01, 1955
Modern Masterprints of Europe
72 artists · 1 curator
Jan 29, 1957 – Feb 24, 1957
Drawings Recently Acquired for the Museum Collection
43 artists · 1 curator
May 04, 1960 – Sep 18, 1960
Portraits from the Museum Collection
92 artists · 1 curator
Oct 11, 1960 – Jan 02, 1961
100 Drawings from the Museum Collection
74 artists · 1 curator
Feb 01, 1961 – Mar 04, 1961
Painting and Sculpture from the James Thrall Soby Collection
37 artists
Aug 19, 1961 – Jan 30, 1962
Modern Allegories
20 artists · 1 curator
May 27, 1964
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
169 artists
May 27, 1964 – Mar 23, 1965
Drawings from the Museum Collections: A Selection
57 artists · 1 curator
Oct 31, 1966 – May 08, 1967
Drawings from the Museum Collection
53 artists
Nov 22, 1966 – Feb 06, 1967
Art in the Mirror
30 artists · 1 curator
Jan 17, 1968 – Mar 04, 1968
The Sidney and Harriet Janis Collection
55 artists · 1 curator
Mar 27, 1968 – Jun 09, 1968
Dada, Surrealism and their Heritage
94 artists · 1 curator
Jul 28, 1971 – Nov 01, 1971
Ways of Looking
132 artists · 1 curator
Oct 18, 1972 – Jan 07, 1973
Philadelphia in New York: 90 Modern Works from the Philadelphia Museum of Art
41 artists · 2 curators
Jun 13, 1974 – Sep 08, 1974
Seurat to Matisse: Drawing in France
79 artists · 1 curator
Aug 20, 1976 – Nov 14, 1976
Between World Wars: Drawing in Europe and America
66 artists · 1 curator
Sep 26, 1977 – Nov 28, 1977
Dream/Reality/Dream
33 artists · 1 curator
Oct 17, 1977 – Dec 11, 1977
Projects: Video XIV
11 artists · 1 curator
Aug 09, 1979 – Nov 13, 1979
Gifts of Drawing
54 artists · 1 curator
Aug 20, 1981 – Oct 06, 1981
Words and Pictures
49 artists · 1 curator
Oct 26, 1983 – Jan 03, 1984
The Modern Drawing: 100 Works on Paper from The Museum of Modern Art
81 artists · 1 curator
May 17, 1984
Selections from the Permanent Collection: Prints and Illustrated Books
99 artists · 2 curators
May 29, 1986 – Sep 30, 1986
Naked/Nude
63 artists · 1 curator
Aug 06, 1987 – Dec 08, 1987
Surrealist Prints from the Collection of The Museum of Modern Art
29 artists · 1 curator
Oct 24, 1987 – Mar 01, 1988
European Drawing Between the Wars
59 artists · 1 curator
Apr 06, 1989 – Aug 08, 1989
Master Prints from the Collection
102 artists · 1 curator