Salvador Dalí: Nudes

Sculpture, Hommage à Terpsichore, Salvador Dali

Hommage à Terpsichore

Salvador Dali

Sculpture - 70.5 x 44 x 23 cm Sculpture - 27.8 x 17.3 x 9.1 inch

$45,487

Sculpture, Venus spatiale, Salvador Dali

Venus spatiale

Salvador Dali

Sculpture - 65 x 35.5 x 32.5 cm Sculpture - 25.6 x 14 x 12.8 inch

$62,336

Sculpture, Lincoln in Dalivision, Salvador Dali

Lincoln in Dalivision

Salvador Dali

Sculpture - 72.4 x 48.3 x 2.5 cm Sculpture - 28.5 x 19 x 1 inch

$7,500

Sculpture, Hommage à la mode, Salvador Dali

Hommage à la mode

Salvador Dali

Sculpture - 51 x 27 x 22 cm Sculpture - 20.1 x 10.6 x 8.7 inch

$30,369

Print, Des Rois Pendus aux Arbres, Salvador Dali

Des Rois Pendus aux Arbres

Salvador Dali

Print - 61 x 44 x 0.1 cm Print - 24 x 17.3 x 0 inch

$15,540

Salvador Dalí: Nudes

Alongside his prolific portfolio of artworks, Salvador Dalí was also known for his unorthodox lifestyle, which heavily influenced his artworks. He had an obsession with the female body, and the majority of his nudes depict women. As a surrealist artist, whose art is characterized by the world of dreams, the bizarre and taboos, Dali used nudes in an unconventional and almost unsettling way. For example, his 1939 World Fair exhibition, The Dream of Venus, consisted of live female models standing with each artwork, hidden inside a grotto. He also produced a series of artworks in 1970 called Nudes Suite that weren't in his usual surrealist style.

On two occasions, Dalí collaborated with famous photographers: The first was with Philippe Halsman in 1951, with whom he created In Voluptars Mors, just one of many projects, which consisted of a photograph of a skull, composed of 7 nude women. The second was with Pompeo Posar for Playboy in 1973, where Dalí surrounded Playboy models with surrealist decorative elements, mixing eroticism with his particular visual universe. Fascinated with Freud, the power of the unconscious and interpreting the human mind, Dali loved to combine these images, which at first seem to have no relation. His way of representing the erotic was colored by fear, pain, anxiety and unconventionallity. Mixing themes of death and fading time, this eroticism was inherently rooted in the fascinations and fears of the artist.

Artsper invites you to discover more nude artworks from the incredible Salvador Dalí.

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