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Salvador Dali | Signs of the Zodiac, 1967

In the late 1960’s, Leon Amiel, a well-known publisher of Dali’s works, commissioned Dali to create the molds for each of the 12 signs of the Zodiac based on Dali’s Zodiac gouaches and lithographs. Twelve Original Hand Signed Numbered Salvador Dali Lithograph - Signs of the Zodiac, New York e Paris, 1967.
A modern master of the Surreal arts, Salvador Dali’s works continually challenged convention by questioning the antithesis of surrealism: our normal sense of the “real". Surrealism’s objective was to make accessible to art the realms of the unconscious, irrational and imaginary.

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Sagittarius

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Virgo

An expansive movement that extended beyond the canvas, Surrealism embraced literature, music, cinema, philosophy and popular culture. Dali’s works drew inspiration from fellow Surrealists, such as Giorgio de Chirico, Max Ernst, Joan Miro and Yves Tanguy, and also from old European masters like Giuseppe Arcimboldo, Giovanni Bracelli and Antoni Gaudi.
Dali’s Surrealist adventures began in 1929 when he painted his first Surrealist painting, The Lugubrious Game. His painting style, which reflects his academic training in its precise, almost photographic realism, transformed Surrealism by the early 1930s. Inspired by psychoanalytical writings of Sigmund Freud, Dali believed that his detailed illusionism was instrumental in the exploration of the dream imagery and the subconscious that he painted.
Dali’s works depict a highly provocative pictorial language that illustrate his imagery into painted metaphors. Iconic images such as a melting clock, the burning giraffe and swarming ants are all keys that Dali offers the viewer to try and unlock his cryptic images.

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Aquarius

Dali was a theatrical and provocative persona among the Parisian Surrealists.
During his extended career, Dali participated in the production of ten films, three theater productions, two operas and nine ballets.
As a perpetual performer himself, Dali naturally cultivated friendships with those in the entertainment world such as Harpo Marx, Alfred Hitchcock and Walt Disney.
Of all his diverse techniques, Dali was perhaps at his most virtuosic when it came to printmaking.
The artist made over fifteen hundred prints during the course of his lifetime, fifty seven of which were created during the 1930’s, the key decade for his artistic development.
Most of Dali’s prints from this era appeared as illustrations in books by fellow Surrealists like Andre Breton and Paul Eluard, among others.
In 1930 Dali illustrated Les Chants de Maldoror, in which he used a stream-of-consciousness process to access personal hallucinations and delusions.
These visions ultimately replaced what was described in the book, once again putting Dali on stage.

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Aries

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Cancer

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Capricorn

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Gemini

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Leo

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Libra

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Pisces

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Scorpio

Salvador Dalí 1904-1989 | Surrealist painter | Twelve Signs of the Zodiac, 1967
Taurus