Salvador Dalí
Salvador Dalí was a leading proponent of Surrealism, the 20th century avant-garde movement that sought to release the creative potential of the unconscious through strange, dream-like imagery. “Surrealism is destructive, but it destroys only what it considers to be shackles limiting our vision,” he said. Dalí is specially credited with the innovation of “paranoia-criticism,” a philosophy of art making he defined as “irrational understanding based on the interpretive-critical association of delirious phenomena.” In addition to meticulously painting fantastic compositions, such as The Accommodations of Desire (1929) and the melting clocks in his famed The Persistence of Memory (1931), Dalí was a prolific writer and early filmmaker, and cultivated an eccentric public persona with his flamboyant mustache, pet ocelot, and outlandish behavior and quips. “Each morning when I awake, I experience again a supreme pleasure,” he once said. “That of being Salvador Dalí.”

Portrait of Ronsard

The 100 Flowers

Flight and Fall of Icarus

Medusa

Narcissus

Athena

Hypnos

Oedipus and Sphinx

Argus in Color

Piano Under The Snow

The Death

The Sun

Old Hippie

Woman With Parrot

The 1914-1918 War

The Phiole

Women in The Waves

The Judgement of Paris

Alice in Wonderland

Birth of Venus

Mythology – Argus in Black

The Egrets

Woman with Crutch

Winged Demon

Negresses

Woman With Cushion

Santiago of Compostela

The Hippies – Nude with Garter

The Cosmonaut

Surrealist Bullfight – Burning Giraffe

Surrealist Bullfight – Bullfight with Parrots

Weeping Willow

Ronsard – Picasso’s Horse

Ronsard – Couple with Candle

Pegasus

Leda and Swan

Mythology – Birth of Venus

The Dragon

Petite Horses

Faust “Knight and Death”

Vignettes of Faust "Faust & Marguerite"

Faust "Kneeling Knight"

Faust "Hen Women"

The Marquis

Don-Juan "Le Banquet"

The Trenches

The Beach at Sete

Mao Zedong “Bust of Mao Zedong”

Flower Women With Soft Piano

The Dreamer
