Spainish painter
Salvador Dali relied on the use of object symbolism to portray thoughts, emotions and fears into his important works. If you want to depict the same meanings behind some of Salvador Dali's symbolism in your own tattoo body art, take a look at the five most popular objects Dali used for creative inspiration.
Born on January 23, 1989 in Figueras, Spain, Salvador Dali was a prominent Surrealist artist who depicted a dream world in most of his paintings before changing his style to classical and religious in the early 1940s.
While all of Salvador's styles are celebrated, his most recognized piece is "The Persistence of Memory" which features melting pocket watches and ants. Using symbolism to connect the dream world to a waking state, many of Salvador's paintings took on a dark and twisted approach which critics today liken to a possible undiagnosed mental illness.
At just five years old, Salvador's parents told him that he was the reincarnation of his brother who died just nine months before Salvador's birth. He took this knowledge very seriously and became convinced of its truth.
Salvador lived an eccentric life with many ups and downs prior to his death in 1989. His most distinctive pieces of art captured a maddening cycle of thoughts and processes perhaps likened to his interest in studying Sigmund Freud.
1. Melting Clocks
Image CC Ahisgett @ Flickr Depicted first in his famed piece The Persistence of Memory", clocks served as a repeating object in Dali's work with the affiliation that time devours everything and that it's always ticking and melting away. Clock tattoos are perfect for
2. Eggs
Image CC oddsock@Flickr Dali used eggs to symbolize love and hope in his works. From breaking out of the shell to the comfort of its inner surroundings, an egg tattoo can be uite a novel idea. Whether it be gilded, painted in a Russian motif or drawn cracking open. Eggs are fragile and so is life.
3. Lobsters
Image CC Cea @ Flickr Not just a painter, Dali also created bizarre artful objects. Depicting sexuality, Dali first used a lobster in his creation titled Téléphone-Homard. This infamous phone was standard until Dali replaced the ear piece with a plaster lobster.In a reoccuring theme of sexuality, the lobster also symbolized the old folk tale vagina dentata; in which a woman's vagina was rumored to contain teeth that castrate man.
4. Drawers
Image CC Cea @Flickr Drawers and step tattoos can have many hidden meanings. In Dali's work, drawers symbolized women's often hidden sexual desires and their concealment. Once the drawers are slightly opened as painted in Dali's infamous work, the secrets of their sexuality are revealed. In other words, out comes the skeletons.
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