Salvador Dalí, Spanish (1904 – 1989)
Etude nu Féminin du face
Medium: Pencil on paper
Framed Size: 53 x 42.5 cm
Unframed Size: 21.5 x 13.7 cm
Signature: Stamped (Lower Right)
Provenance: Private collection, United Kingdom
In stock
Salvador Dalí, Spanish (1904 – 1989)
Etude nu Féminin du face
Medium: Pencil on paper
Framed Size: 53 x 42.5 cm
Unframed Size: 21.5 x 13.7 cm
Signature: Stamped (Lower Right)
Provenance: Private collection, United Kingdom
Salvador Dalí is among the most versatile and prolific artists of the 20th century and the most famous Surrealist. Though chiefly remembered for his painterly output, in the course of his long career he successfully turned to sculpture, printmaking, fashion, advertising, writing, and, perhaps most famously, filmmaking in his collaborations with Luis Buñuel and Alfred Hitchcock. Dalí was renowned for his flamboyant personality and role of mischievous provocateur as much as for his undeniable technical virtuosity. Dalí burst onto the art scene in 1929 and rarely left the public eye until his death six decades later.
Dalí was born in Figueres, a small town outside Barcelona, to a prosperous middle-class family. The family suffered greatly before the artist’s birth, because their first son (also named Salvador) died quickly. The young artist was often told that he is the reincarnation of his dead brother. His lawyer father and his mother greatly nurtured his early interest in art. He had his first drawing lessons at age 10 and in his late teens was enrolled at the Madrid School of Fine Arts, where he experimented with Impressionist and Pointillist styles. When he was a mere 16, Dalí lost his mother to breast cancer, which was according to him, “the greatest blow I had experienced in my life.” When he was 19, his father hosted a solo exhibition of the young artist’s technically exquisite charcoal drawings in the family home.