Salvador Dalí (1904-1989) was one of our greatest modern artists and an icon of surrealism. Dalí's fantastic expression in paintings, sculptures, films and writings helped to cement the identity of Surrealism. Drawing inspiration from Freud's psychoanalysis, Einstein's theory of relativity, impressionism and Renaissance painting, Dalí rendered symbolist, fantastical creatures and landscapes. Few artists have had such a peculiar universe as Salvador Dalí, where an imaginative mix of madness executed with technical perfection and precision reigns. His painting "The Persistence of Memory" from 1931 is one of the most famous works of art of all time. Dalí lived as he created - in constant movement, in search of immortality.
Dalí feared the passage of time and became obsessed with the ever-flowing time. In his art, he inverts the characteristics of the watch, which is hard and precise, and instead makes it appear soft, flawed and bent beyond recognition. Dalí's clockwork does not work, time has become non-linear and appears rather as fluid or melting. The clocks in Dalí's art lose their meaning and the essence of time thus floats away. Dalí originally got the inspiration for the melting clock from a runny Camembert cheese he saw melting in the sun.
Size: Height 38.5 cm
Technique: Sculpture, lost wax
Material: Bronze
Edition: 350
Caster: Perseo, Switzerland
Year: The maquette was created by Dalí in 1979 and the first work in the series was cast in 1984.
Signed and numbered. Certificates from The Dalí Universe and Perseo accompany the sculpture.
Estimated delivery time 6-8 weeks.