From Spain to Florida: new Dali exhibit begins
Topics: From the Wires, Entertainment News
In this Jan. 11, 2011 photo, Visitors walk outside the new Salvador Dali museum after grand opening ceremonies in St. Petersburg, Fla. Twelve pieces by Salvador Dali are on display at the Florida museum until March 31, 2013 in a show called "The Royal Inheritance: Dalì Works From the Spanish National Collection. The paintings, which span from 1918 to 1983, have never before been exhibited the United States. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)(Credit: AP)ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — In the mid-1920s, a young Salvador Dali was searching for his style.
He painted a startlingly lifelike basket of bread in a typical Renaissance form. He dabbled in cubism and painted in abstract black, white and gray. He also painted a scene in 1925 that he called “Desnudo en el Agua” (Nude in the Water), which gives an inkling of the surrealist genius to come.
The painting is a close-up of a woman’s shapely buttocks, and the unique perspective reveals that Dali was looking at subjects and paintings in a whole new way as a young artist.
“He’s not doing an academic perspective,” wryly notes Hank Hine, the director of the Salvador Dali Museum in St. Petersburg.
That subtly erotic work, along with 11 others, is on display at the Florida museum until March 31, 2013 in a show called “The Royal Inheritance: Dalí Works From the Spanish National Collection.” The paintings, which span from 1918 to 1983, have never before been exhibited the United States.
The works are on loan from the National Collection of Modern Art in Spain.
It’s an exhibit that merges the vast permanent collection housed in St. Petersburg — which was amassed by one couple from Cleveland who befriended the artist — with works owned by the Spanish Kingdom, which inherited Dali’s estate after he died in 1989.
For a visitor to the museum in St. Petersburg, it means a well-rounded and fun romp through Dali’s vast body of work.
Hine said the Florida museum was able to acquire the Spanish loans in exchange for collaborating on another Dali exhibition, one at the Centre Pompidou in Paris on Nov. 21. The show will also be shown in Madrid starting April 23, 2013.
“The world has a huge appetite for Dali,” said Hine. “He’s lastingly exciting.”
That appetite for his surrealist paintings, and the desire to see the striking new museum, has sparked an arts renaissance in St. Petersburg. The museum moved into a $36 million glass-and-concrete building along the city’s waterfront on January 11, 2011, and has welcomed an average of 1,000 people a day since opening.
The museum’s signature detail is a wave of glass paneling that undulates around the building — a feature that was designed by architect Yann Weymouth, who had a hand in creating the glass pyramid at the Louvre in Paris. There’s also a helix-like concrete staircase that stretches from the ticket counter to the third floor, and a cafe that serves smooth glasses of Spanish wine and traditional olives.



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