Salvador Dalí and Three American Surrealists

  • Where: Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
  • When: closed
  • Address: 11 W 53rd St, New York, New York, 10019
  • Cross Streets: 6th Avenue
  • Phone: 212.708.9400
  • Email:
  • Hours: Sat-Mon and Wed-Thu, 10:30am-5:30pm; Fri, 10:30am-8pm; Tue, closed
  • Closed: Tuesday
  • Transportation: E, V at Fifth Ave.-53rd St.; F at 57th St.
  • Directions: via Google Maps
  • Category: Film

After exhibiting his Surrealist art at New York’s Julien Levy Gallery in 1934, Dal√ɬ≠ concluded that his audacious brand of hyperrealistic paintings would inevitably be welcomed by the Hollywood community√¢‚Ǩ‚Äùthe manufacturers of “hallucinatory celluloid.” In an exuberant message to Andr√ɬ© Breton, he declared, “I’m in Hollywood where I’ve made contact with the three American Surrealists, Harpo Marx, [Walt] Disney, and Cecil B. DeMille. I believe I’ve intoxicated them suitably and hope that the possibilities for Surrealism here will become a reality.” This exhibition comprises a selection of notable films by Disney, DeMille, and the Marx Brothers that demonstrate a Surrealist sensibility.

Dal√ɬ≠ had been introduced to Harpo Marx in Paris in 1936, and he was convinced that the mute, curly-haired performer was a kinsman in the Surrealist movement√¢‚Ǩ‚ÄùHarpo’s silence was considered by Dal√ɬ≠ to be an anarchistic form of rebellion against modern society. In Disney, Dal√ɬ≠ envisioned an avuncular ally who rendered childlike imagination into popular culture and was creating a worldwide brand. Finally, and perhaps most curiously, the inclusion of DeMille signals Dal√ɬ≠’s own preference for epic historical and religious motifs that teeter on the line between daring modernity and drippy kitsch.

Comments

Be the first person to add a comment

Login or Signup to comment.

Footer-black-logo

Artlog is an online/offline art & design resource.

Top | Home | Contact us | Help | Bugs! | © 2008 Artlog. All rights reserved