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Pollock To Pop: America's Brush With Dalí

December 9, 2005 - April 23, 2006

Pollock To Pop: America's Brush With Dalí
, provides insight to the relationship between post-WWII American Art and Dalí's work from that era. The exhibition presents a moment in the history of art of great change, positioning major works of American post war art, especially those in the manner of Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art in dialog with one another and with the painting of Salvador Dalí.

It is the aim of this exhibition to explore artistic dialogue in a sophisticated and multi-dimensional sense. It presents the panorama of options available to Dalí in the post-war years, highlighting those especially he saw on his habitual visits to New York each winter in the decades after the war," he added.

After World War II, the center of energy in the art world shifted to America. Europe had led the western world in generating new approaches to art, both technical and stylistic, since the time of Giotto; Venice, Rome, Amsterdam, Madrid, Berlin and Paris had variously commanded the leading role, until suddenly, all eyes were upon New York. The artists, who caused this excitement, Pollock, de Kooning, and Rothko, among others, had been steeped in Surrealism, in its procedures of spontaneity and its lacerating forms. Now these artists began to externalize the psychic energy of their painting, pouring their vigor, confidence, and even fear into the physical act of painting. Dalí paid close attention to these painters and their new art, identifying with their challenge to the status quo. They in turn were challenged by a new generation of painters concerned more with images derived from popular, mass culture and less with the texture of paint. Dalí again looked at this development as a springboard to new pictorial innovation.

Pollock To Pop: America's Brush With Dalí includes art borrowed from major American museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the National Gallery in Washington, D.C., private collections and foundations. Holding the largest collection of Salvador Dalí works outside the artist's native Spain, the exhibition also features selections from the Salvador Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg's permanent collection to complement the exhibition.

Paintings in the exhibition include Number 7, 1952 by Jackson Pollock and works by Roy Lichtenstein, Willem de Kooning, Mark Rothko, James Rosenquist, Claes Oldenberg and Chuck Close. These works will be presented to elucidate Dalí's ongoing exploration of both painterly and image-based means of representation.

"We are very pleased to bring such stellar examples of the American artists who changed the course of art, just as Dalí and the Surrealists changed its course before," said Hank Hine, Executive Director. "This exhibition, made possible by the generous loans of fellow museums and the sponsorship of Progress Energy, is significant as it is the first to look particularly at the vast influence American artists and Salvador Dalí had on each other," he added.

Among Salvador Dalí's art included in Pollock To Pop: America's Brush With Dalí are Madonna (1958) (Metropolitan Museum of Art), Velázquez Painting the Infanta Marguerita with the Lights and Shadows of his Own Glory (1958) and Portrait of My Dead Brother (1963) (both Salvador Dalí Museum). Also included is the museum's most recent acquisition, Gala Contemplating the Mediterranean Sea Which at Twenty Meters Becomes a Portrait of Abraham Lincoln (Homage to Rothko), (Second Version) 1976).

Pollock To Pop: America's Brush With Dalí is made possible by Progress Energy, whose interest in providing for this community the highest quality of cultural and educational experiences provides a benchmark for corporate engagement.

 

The Salvador Dalí Museum is sponsored in part by the Pinellas County Arts Council, the City of St. Petersburg, the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs, and the Florida Arts Council.

 

 

Events & Programs:


art@2:00 Film

Jackson Pollock - Portrait (Strokes of Genius series)

Thursday, January 19

2:00 pm

Free with museum admission.

Lecture

Dr. John Hartmann:
Dalí’s Homage to Rothko: A Psychoanalytic Study
Thursday, January 26
6:30 pm

Coffee with a Dalí Curator:

Joan Kropf: Dalí Under the Influence

Wednesday, February 1

9:45-10:30 am

Coffee in store at 9:45 followed by a gallery walk with a curator.  The event is free with Museum admission. Admission to the Dalí Museum is always free to Dalí Museum Members and those with USF identification cards.

 

 

 

 

 

Credits:

  1. Claes Oldenburg
    Soft Pay-Telephone - Ghost Version, 1963
    Courtesy The Brant Foundation, Greenwich, CT
    © Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen

  2. Salvador Dali
    Lobster Telephone, 1936
    © Salvador Dali Museum, St. Petersburg, FL

  3. James Rosenquist
    Shadows, 1961
    Collection of the Artist
    © James Rosenquist / Licensed by VAGA, NY, NY


 

Claes Oldenburg
Soft Pay-Telephone
Ghost Version, 1963

 

Salvador Dali
Lobster Telephone, 1936

 

James Rosenquist
Shadows, 1961

 

 

 

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