The Galerie Montmartre
Open Monday to Sunday, from 9:30am to 6:30pm
Price on request
Dalí pays homage to Isaac Newton for his discovery of the law of gravity symbolized by the apple falling from a tree. The famous apple has been transformed into a hard sphere hanging from a string. It appears to be halted midflight, the cord representing the fall of the apple.
In this sculpture, Dalí implies that the living being Newton has become a mere name in science, entirely stripped of his personality and individuality. His incredible and revolutionary laws of motion take centre place obscuring all personal details of Newton himself.
To depict this transformation, Dalí has pierced the figure with two eye catching holes, the oval in the head suggests open mindedness whilst the large opening in the torso portrays the absence of Newton’s physical body. The opening in the chest and the way light shines through is a perfect symbolic allusion to anther of the physician’s discoveries, on the subject of light.
Salvador Felipe Jacinto Dalí y Doménech was born in 1904 in Figueras, Spain. A painter, sculptor, and author, he is considered one of the most distinctive representatives of surrealism and icons of the 20th century.
Influenced by Impressionism, he began his artistic training at the academy in Madrid. On the advice of Miro, he then left for Paris, where he joined the Surrealist group. There he met his future wife, Gala, his “surrealist muse” and the inspiration for his life and work.
Dalí found his unique style around 1929 when he invented the paranoiac-critical method. His works revolve around the themes of dreams, sexuality, his wife Gala, and religion.
The sculptures of Salvador Dalí
In the 1930s, Dalí began experimenting with three-dimensional art and sculpture. His desire was to translate the fetishes and obsessions of his unconscious into volume and solid matter. He thus recreated the major themes of his pictorial work in the form of sculptures. These sculptures were made using the lost wax technique, a process that allows for perfect precision in bronze modeling.
They represent a significant aspect of Dalí’s artistic creation and provide a synthesis of his interest in form. These bronze sculptures are effectively surrealism in the third dimension.
Galerie Montmartre since 2016, with a permanent representation in France and across international art fairs. The gallery handles international, door-to-door delivery with insurance.
Open Monday to Sunday, from 9:30am to 6:30pm