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Salvador Dalí
Don Quichotte de la Mancha, by Miguel de Cervantés Saavedra
Full-Cataloguing
Don Quizote and Sancho Panza; Dulcinea; The Chimera of Chimeras; The Aura of Cervantes; The Battle with the Wineskins; The Hidalgo's Metamorphosis; Milky Way; The Fight against Danger; Gala, My Sistine Madonna; Tilting at the Windmills; Don Quixote Reading and The Golden Age
Salvador Dalí
Spanish | B. 1904 D. 1989Salvador Dalí was perhaps the most broadly known member of the Surrealist movement of the early twentieth century. Heavily influenced by Sigmund Freud, the avant-garde style explored consciousness and dream-like states through exaggerated landscapes and bizarre or grotesque imagery. Using the means of painting, sculpture, printmaking, film and literature, Dalí explored these ideas with a meticulous hand and inventive wit.
Although known for his role in Surrealism, Dalí was also a seminal example of celebrity showmanship and the cult of personality, a phenomenon that dominates popular culture today. Always a colorful and flamboyant presence with his signature cape, wide-eyed expression and trademark upturned waxed mustache, Dalí was a master of self-promotion and spectacle.