Salvador Dali's Optical Illusions examines the pictorial techniques employed by the great Surrealist painter Salvador Dalà (1904-1989). The exhibition focuses on the artist's life-long fascination with illusion, visual perception and distortion, and will display over 50 of DalÃ's most important paintings.
Salvador DalÃ's Optical Illusions
examines the pictorial techniques
employed by the great Surrealist painter
Salvador Dalà (1904-1989). The
exhibition focuses on the artist's
life-long fascination with illusion, visual
perception and distortion, and will
display over 50 of DalÃ's most important
paintings.
Although best-known as a revolutionary
and iconoclastic Surrealist painter, DalÃ
was deeply indebted to art of earlier
periods and continually sought ways to
combine traditional images and
techniques with scientific findings. His
fascination with the dream led to some
of the twentieth century's most brilliant
and disturbing visualisations of the
unconscious.
The exhibition explores how the artist's
double or dissolving images relate to
scientific thought and study, and
examines the techniques Dalà developed
in anamorphic perspective, pointillism
and stereometry. It also analyses DalÃ's
use of photography and hologram.
Organised by the Wadsworth Atheneum
at Hartford, Connecticut, this is the only
showing of the exhibition outside the
USA. A fully illustrated catalogue,
featuring essays by guest curator
Professor Dawn Ades, accompanies the
exhibition.
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art
Edinburgh,
UK United Kingdom