Monday, October 24, 2011

Salvador Dali and Andy Warhol


  • guardian.co.uk,

  • I was working for Condé Nast and Mademoiselle magazine in New York and had a reportage way of shooting, even for fashion. It caught Andy Warhol's eye; he wanted someone to tag along to parties or to photograph him making silkscreens and movies, capturing his daily life.

    For a 24-year-old Englishman, hanging out at the Factory was mind-blowing. I had no idea people lived this way; any time of the day or night, there would be something wild going on. I couldn't afford to get too whacked because I had to stay focused for my work, so I just observed. And a lot of what happened I couldn't photograph: there was no way you could publish those kind of pictures.
    On this particular occasion, in the winter of 1964-65, I got a call saying we were to meet at the St Regis hotel: we were going to visit Salvador Dalí, my hero. I was thrilled. When we arrived at his suite, Dalí beckoned us in with a cane and no one spoke; opera music was playing so loudly that the room was vibrating. He grabbed Andy by the arm and plonked him in a chair, pointed at me to get my camera ready, then grabbed a huge Inca headdress, dramatically placing it on Andy's head.
    It was pure theatre. Dalí was making Andy so nervous – which was unusual: it was usually him who made other people tongue-tied – that he was guzzling back wine. I'd never even seen him drink before. He kept looking as if he was ready to bolt for the door, and then finally he said: "David, we've gotta go."
    There is nothing manufactured about the picture: things happened so fast it was almost like being a war photographer. We were there for no more than five minutes, and we never discussed the experience afterwards. That wasn't Andy's style, and I think he was genuinely shocked by the meeting. Suddenly the table had been turned and it was no longer me photographing Warhol, it was Dalí with Warhol.

    Monday, October 17, 2011

    Salvador Dali photos

    Dali and Alfred Hitchcock

    Dali on Whats My Line TV show

    Dali creating hand signed lithographs in his studio
    in the mid 1960's

    Salvador Dali Fashion Show

    1953 - Dali entered a Fashion Contest in New York. The theme was, "Woman of the Future." The dress that Dali had designed was so large it had to be photographed on the roof of "The Roxy." Here is one of the Phillippe Halsman photos of the event. In true Halsman fashion, the model is jumping.

    Thursday, October 13, 2011

    Salvador Dali Dulcinea

    Salvador Dali's Dulcinea the imaginary beauty conjured up by the main character of the story Don Quixote in Don Quichotte of La Mancha

    Tuesday, October 11, 2011

    Salvador Dali Battle with the Wine Skins

    Salvador Dali created original lithographs in 1957

    The subject was Don Quichotte or Don Quixote (Two spellings)

    This is the image that depicts the part of the story having to do with the slashing of the wine skins.

    Complete Biography of Salvador Dali the Artist from Spain

    Salvador Dali Don Quichotte

    Salvador Dali Don Quichotte also spelled Don Quixote, both spellings are used in the suite of 1957 original lithographs created by Salvador Dali

    Wednesday, October 5, 2011

    The Discovery of America by Christopher Columbus Salvador Dali

    The Discovery of America by Christopher Columbus can be seen at the Dali Museum in
    St. Petersburg Florida.
    One of Dali's most talked about works, is among many large impressive and well known oils created by Dali
    over 40 years ago.

    Monday, October 3, 2011

    Dali Biography video

    Salvador Dali in Switerland Surrealism exhibit



    The Fondation Beyeler is devoting the first-ever comprehensive exhibition in Switzerland to Surrealism in Paris.
    On view will be major works by artists such as Salvador Dalí, René Magritte, Joan Miró, and many more who either belonged to the movement or were associated with it. Surrealism was one of the most crucial artistic and literary movements of the twentieth century and had a lasting influence on it. After emerging in Paris in 1924, the movement unfolded a worldwide impact. Influenced by the writings of Sigmund Freud and under the leadership of its chief theoretician, André Breton, the Surrealists set out to change life and society by means of a new brand of art and poetry. Tapping the unconscious mind and world of dreams was to trigger an entirely unprecedented kind of creativity. "Dalí, Magritte, Miró – Surrealism in Paris" comprises about 290 masterworks and manuscripts by about 40 artists and authors.
    The highlights will include a presentation of the legendary Surrealist private collections amassed by Peggy Guggenheim and by Breton’s first wife Simone Collinet. In addition to famous paintings and sculptures, objects, photographs, drawings, manuscripts, jewelry and films await discovery.
    The loans to the exhibition stem from renowned private collections and public museums, in Europe and the United States.

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