Inventions of the Monsters

Description

Salvador Dalí, Surrealism’s most publicized practitioner, created monstrous visions of a world turned inside out, which he made even more compelling through his extraordinary technical skills. When the Art Institute acquired Inventions of the Monsters in 1943, the artist wrote his congratulations and explained:

"According to Nostradamus the apparition of monsters presages the outbreak of war. The canvas was painted in the Semmering mountains near Vienna a few months before the Anschluss [the 1938 political union of Austria and Germany] and has a prophetic character. Horse women equal maternal river monsters. Flaming giraffe equals masculine apocalyptic monster. Cat angel equals divine heterosexual monster. Hourglass equals metaphysical monster. Gala and Dalí equal sentimental monster. The little blue dog is not a true monster."

Inventions of the Monsters has an ominous mood. It is rife with threats of danger, from the menacing fire in the distance to the sibylline figure in the foreground with an hourglass and a butterfly, both symbols of the inevitability of death. Next to this figure sit Dalí and his wife and muse, Gala. With his native Catalonia embroiled in the Spanish Civil War, the artist surely felt great anxiety over a world without a safe haven, a world that indeed had allowed for the invention of monsters.

This is one of thirty-five works that comprise the Winterbotham Collection. Click here to learn more about the collection.

Provenance

James T. Soby (1906–1979) and Eleanor H. Bruce (born Eleanor Howland, 1905-1999, married, 1938-1952), Farmington, CT, by 1940 [Hartford 1940]. Durlacher Brothers, New York, by May 27, 1943 [letter from Daniel Catton Rich to Durlacher Brothers, May 27, 1943; copy in curatorial object file]; sold by partial exchange to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1943.

Inventions of the Monsters

Salvador Dalí

1937

Accession Number

151424

Medium

Oil on canvas

Dimensions

51.4 × 78.4 cm (20 1/4 × 30 7/8 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Joseph Winterbotham Collection

Background & Context

Background Story

Salvador Dali (1904-1989) painted Inventions of the Monsters in 1937, during his most productive Surrealist period, when he was producing the meticulously painted dream images that make him the most famous Surrealist painter. The painting depicts a dreamlike landscape populated by the monstrous figures that Dali invented from his Freudian-inspired unconscious—the double images, the melting forms, and the irrational juxtapositions that are the hallmarks of his paranoid-critical method. The 1937 date places this in the period when Dali was producing the most accomplished Surrealist paintings of his career, before his break with the Surrealist movement and his move toward more traditional painting in the 1940s.

Cultural Impact

Inventions of the Monsters is important in the history of Surrealism because it demonstrates the meticulously painted dream images and monstrous figures that make Dali the most famous Surrealist painter. Dali's paranoid-critical method—a deliberate cultivation of irrational associations—produced the double images and irrational juxtapositions that are the hallmarks of Surrealist painting, and Inventions of the Monsters shows the method at its most accomplished.

Why It Matters

Inventions of the Monsters is Dali's meticulously painted Surrealist dream: monstrous figures and irrational juxtapositions rendered with the meticulous technique and Freudian imagery that make him the most famous Surrealist painter. The 1937 painting shows the paranoid-critical method at its most accomplished, before Dali's break with the Surrealist movement.