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Metamorphosis of Narcissus.
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Metamorphosis of Narcissus.
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Description
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http://echo.louisville.edu/login?url=http://vrc-web.louisville.edu/Jpegs/2440/2447-21.jpg
Title
Metamorphosis
of
Narcissus
.
Creator
Dali, Salvador (Spanish painter and printmaker, 1904-1989)
Date
1936-1937
Cultural Context
Spanish
European
Western European
Style/Period
Surrealist
Modern (styles and periods)
Modernist
Theme
Paintings (visual works)
Oil paintings (visual works)
Avant-garde
Fantasy
Illusion
Optical illusion
Ambiguity
Allusion
Imagery
Symbolism (artistic concept)
Symbols
Myths (literary documents)
Mythology (literary genre)
Eroticism
Sex
Sexuality
Phallic
Homosexuality
Fear
Love
Poetry
Poems
Figurative art
Figures (representations)
Women
Men (male humans)
Nudes (representations)
Nudity
Dancers
Back views
Pedestals
Hands (animal or human components)
Fingers (animal or human components)
Landscapes (representations)
Egg
Fossils
Clouds
Sky
Flowers (plants)
Plants (vegetation)
Vegetation
Reflections (perceived properties)
Subject
Paintings
Oil paintings
Fantasy
Optical illusions
Allusions
Symbols
Myths
Sex
Fear
Love
Self-interest
Poetry
Women
Men
Nudes
Gays
Dancers
Dance
Backs (Anatomy)
Pedestals
Body parts
Hands
Fingers
Eggs
Landscapes (Representations)
Rocks
Clouds
Fossils
Flowers
Plants
Reflections
Description
"This
is
the
painting
Dali
took
to
show
Freud
in
London
.
It
belonged
formerly
to
Edward
James.
"
(Caption)
; "At
Zürs
[…]
Dali
embarked
on a
new
experiment
: the
composition
, in
French
, of a
'paranoaic'
poem
, The
Myth
of
Narcissus
, to be
concurrently
illustrated
,
'word
by
word'
, in a
painting
.
[…]
The
subtitle
of the
poem
explained
that the
latter
constituted
a
'way
of
visually
observing
the
course
of the
metamorphosis
of
Narcissus'
[…]
.
Dali's
interest
in the
Narcissus
myth
may
have been
stimulated
by
Albert
Skira's
edition
of
Ovid's
Metamorphoses
,
illustrated
by
Picasso
.
Given
his
own
,
Narcissus-style
self-absorption
it
was
hardly
surprising
that he
considered
the
myth
of
great
personal
relevance
. In this he was
assisted
by
Freud's
Three
Essays
on
Sexuality
and,
particularly
,
'Psycho-Analytic
Notes
on an
Autobiographical
Account
of a
Case
of
Paranoia'
. In the
latter
Freud
uses
the
term
'narcissism'
(defined
in The
Interpretation
of
Dreams
as
'the
unbounded
self-love
of
children')
to
designate
'a
stage
in the
development
of the
libido
which
it
passes
through
on the
way
from
auto-erotism
[sic]
to
object-love'
,
stressing
that
it
is
a
moment
when
fixations
can
easily
be
established
and
neuroses
and
paranoia
take
firm
hold
.
Dali
must
have been
struck
to
discover
that
Freud
interprets
paranoia
as a
defense
against
homosexuality
.
Since
the
painter
now
claimed
to be not
only
the
Great
Masturbator
but the
Great
Paranoiac
,
featured
in the
painting
of this
title
done
the
previous
year
, he
must
have been
aware
that, to be
consistent
, he should have
claimed
fear
of
homosexuality
,
real
or
imagined
, as an
important
factor
in his
personality
. But, as
Santos
Torroella
has
pointed
out
in his
penetrating
analysis
of
Metamorphosis
of
Narcissus
,
Dali
was
never
prepared
, or
able
, to
take
this
step
.
[…]
Given
Dali's
fear
of
homosexuality
,
now
fused
with his
fear
of
paranoia
,
it
comes
as
no
surprise
to
find
allusions
to
Lorca
[Federico
García
Lorca]
in the
poem
Metamorphosis
of
Narcissus
and, by
extension
, in the
picture
of the
same
name
.
[…]
Almost
ten
years
earlier
,
when
Lorca
published
his
Gypsy
Ballads
,
Dali
had
criticized
what he
considered
the
poem's
old-hat
Andalusian
localism
. This
did
not
prevent
the
painter
from
hinting
now
in
Metamorphosis
of
Narcissus
at
one
of
Lorca's
most
moving
poems
in that
collection
. The
allusion
comes
when
Dali
evokes
the
dancers
in the
background
of the
painting
,
whom
he
terms
'the
heterosexual
group'
. The
males
comprise
a
Hindi
, a
Catalan
and a
German
; the
females
an
Englishwoman
, a
Russian
, a
Swede
, an
American
and
'the
great
somber
Andalusian
robust
with
glands
and
olive-green
from
anguish.'
This
must
be
Soledad
Montoya
, the
protagonist
of
Lorca's
'Ballad
of
Black
Anguish'
,
whom
we
find
searching
desperately
,
like
so
many
of
Lorca's
characters
, for a
love
denied
to her. Her
presence
here
is
yet
another
indication
of how
much
Lorca
, a
year
after
his
assassination
, was
haunting
Dali
.
[…]
Santos
Torroella
is
correct
,
surely
, in
seeing
the
full
sense
of
Dali's
poem
, and
henceforth
of the
painting
, in the
appearance
of
Gala
at the
end
.
Immersed
in
self-absorption
; in
danger
,
when
Lorca
was
alive
, of
succumbing
to
homosexual
tendencies
, and
perhaps
still
in
danger
of
doing
so
; his
sexual
activity
reduced
to the
fantasy
world
of
masturbation
, as
symbolized
by the
monumental
,
fossilized
hand
into
which
Narcissus
is
transformed
in the
painting
:
Dali
has been
offered
the
chance
of
survival
, if not
cure
, by the
epiphany
of the
Muse
who
came
into his
life
at
Cadaqués
in the
summer
of
1929
. In this
respect
it
is
significant
that the
scene
is
set
at
Cape
Creus
, the
low
hills
of
whose
hinterland
are
unmistakable
in the
background
, for
it
was here that the
couple
had
discovered
their
love
.
Gala
does
not
appear
directly
in the
painting
, but
is
symbolized
by the
narcissus
that
bursts
from the
head
of the
despairing
self-contemplative
,
now
changed
into an
egg
[…].
"
(Excerpts
,
pp.427-430)
Location Depicted
Creus, Cape (Spain)
Spain
Material
Oil on canvas
Oil paint (pigmented coating)
Paint
Canvas
Measurements
50.8 x 78.3 cm
Technique
Oil painting (technique)
Painting (image-making)
Work Type
Oil paintings
Paintings
Source
Gibson, Ian. The Shameful Life of Salvador Dali. New York; London: W.W. Norton, 1998. (Color plate XXIX)
Rights
Photograph reproduced in Gibson courtesy: Tate Gallery, London/Art Resource, NY.
Digital Publisher
University of Louisville Department of Fine Arts/Allen R. Hite Art Institute Visual Resources Center
Format
image/jpeg
Digital File Name
VRC
2447-21.jpg
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