The Beach at Sete
Salvador Dalí
Secret Poems of Apollinaire: The Beach at Sete – La Plage at Sête, 1967.
Original etching reworked in drypoint on handmade archival paper.
ML/Argillet #191; Fields #67-10F, Published in 1967.
Hand-signed and numbered at the lower margins.
Secret Poems By Apollinaire Dali’s initial plan was to illustrate a number of songs by Georges Brassens, shown with his guitar on the first etchings, singing the feminine body. However, the singer’s agent recommended so many changes that Dali shifted themes and turned “The Trenches” into a military ground, where time seems at a standstill, like a “Soft Watch” rock. Seeing in the plates a correlation with the 1914-1918 war, Pierre Argillet suggested that Dali illustrate the “Secret Poems” by Apollinaire instead. From then on, the series took a more unconventional, more Surrealist turn, with compositions like “Woman with Snail”, “Woman at Fountain” covered by giant ants, and “The Drawers”, who ends up devouring his guitar.
A suite of 18 original etchings reworked in drypoint, of which 10 are 15 x 11 inches, and 8 are vignettes.
Salvador Dali, Argillet Collection – Off The Wall Gallery, Houston, Texas.