An excellent mid 20th Century limited edition bronze figure of the Venus de Milo incorporating multiple drawer compartments to her head, breasts, torso and left leg symbolising memories and the subconscious. The bronze with a wonderful green floretin patina, signed Salvador Dali and with Valsuani foundry mark
Entitled - Venus de Milo with Drawers
- Bronze, lost wax casting, green florentin patina.
- numbered 257 from a limited edition of 499.
- The edition was authorized by DEMART PRO ARTE B.V. and licenced by Dali in 1986
- signed Salvador Dali and stamped VALSUANI 257/499 V.F. 1988 DEMART
- cast under licence at the Airaindor Valsuani foundry in France
LITERATURE:
This artwork is referenced in the Catalogue Raisonné "DALI, Sculptures & Objets, The Hard and the Soft" by Robert and Nicolas Descharnes, editions Eccart 2004. Page 37 Illustration #68.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Height: 36 cm
Width: 12 cm
Depth: 9 cm
Circa: 1988
Condition: Excellent Original Condition
Foundry: Valsuani
Materials: Bronze
Book Ref: Dali - Sculpture & Objects - by Descharnes
Page No: 37
SKU: 9213
ABOUT
Venus aux Tiroirs
Influenced by the work of Sigmund Freud, Dalì envisioned the idea of a cabinet transformed into a female figure, which he called an “anthropomorphic cabinet.” Venus de Milo with Drawers is the culmination of his explorations into the deep, psychological mysteries of sexual desire, which are symbolized in the figure of the ancient goddess of love.
Referring to the "Idea Drawer", a legacy of reading Freud's concepts, these drawers express the mystery of hidden secrets. Most children explore every drawer, cabinet and closet in their home.
In Dali's words - "The only difference between immortal Greece and contemporary times is Sigmund Freud, who discovered that the human body, purely platonic in the Greek epoch, is nowadays full of secret drawers that only psychoanalysis is capable to open."
Salvador Dali
Salvador Felipe Jacinto Dalí i Domènech (* May 11, 1904 in Figueres, Catalonia, Spain; † January 23, 1989) spent his life exploring the limits of the human spirit. Which was sometimes reflected on the screen in bizarre dream worlds.
As one of the main representatives of Surrealism, Salvador Dalí is one of the most famous painters of the 20th century. But the universal genius was also a gifted graphic artist, writer, stage designer and sculptor. The year was 1956, when Dalí completed a sculpture that expressed all his creative power. Dalí was probably inspired by another important artist - Albrecht Dürer. As is known, in 1515 he had made a woodcut depicting a rhinoceros only on the basis of a description, since he had never seen the unusual animal himself.
Although coming from two different eras, Dalí and Dürer would probably have gotten along well. After all, both artists went into great detail with their works. However, Dalí would not be Dalí if he had not added a crown to his work, with a wink and a slight twirl to the famous beard. In Dalí's case, however, the crown mutates into a sea urchin. By arranging the rhinoceros with a sea urchin, Dalí succeeds in elevating the object of representation to a new level. Salvador Dalí, who liked to describe his associative and dream worlds as a paranoiac-critical method, thus alienates Dürer's depiction of the animal in a surrealistic way. Dalí's rhinoceros sculpture was created in 1954 as a large-format unique piece. The artist never realized an edition of this sculpture throughout his life. Dalí would certainly have been pleased that the original has been on display in the Marbella marina since 2004.
For those who would like to have the famous rhinoceros a few sizes smaller in their home showcase, there is an opportunity. Robert Descharnes, owner of the exploitation rights to Dalí's sculptures, authorized the casting of the small sculpture "Rhinocéros" in 1997, which is aimed at collectors. In the famous art foundry Airaindor-Valsuani, about 30 kilometers south of Paris, these and other bronze sculptures by Dalí. The unique piece in the marina of Marbella, however, in its monumental size exerts its own charm on the viewer. Quite in the spirit of the eccentric artist.
To see more Salvador Dali sculptures in our collection click here