Prague - the city of drawers:
Salvador Dalí never visited Prague, but in the painting The Anthropomorphic Cabinet from the year 1936 (Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf) he depicted in a corner a view of Prague, the Anglická ulice [English Street] in Prague-Vinohrady in the vicinity of the náměstí Míru [Peace Square]...
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1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
[2022]
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Schlagworte: | |
Zusammenfassung: | Salvador Dalí never visited Prague, but in the painting The Anthropomorphic Cabinet from the year 1936 (Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf) he depicted in a corner a view of Prague, the Anglická ulice [English Street] in Prague-Vinohrady in the vicinity of the náměstí Míru [Peace Square] with the Church of St Ludmila. The original title of the painting was City of Drawers which Dalí changed to the current title before 1965. For this view he used a postcard from around 1905–1908 with the caption of the place, which was at that time still part of an independent city, Královské Vinohrady. According to Dalí, the painting is a ‘kind of allegory of psychoanalysis, which illustrates the satisfaction with which we smell the narcissistic scent of each one of our drawers’. Dalí chose the postcard because he could recognise himself in the boy in the sailor suit, and in the woman next to him he saw his mother, or perhaps his aunt, Carolineta. My hypothesis is that in the painting City of Drawers we find a narcissistic-Surrealist construction of a myth, with Dalí declaring Prague to be his territory since his childhood, in reaction to the successful visit to Prague by André Breton in 1935, because at that time he rivalled Breton for the role of the leading surrealist. The message of this picture was not addressed to any beholder; rather, it was a case of narcissistic self-reassurance. Later, this meaning lost its relevance, and Dalí changed the title |
Beschreibung: | 4 Illustrationen |
ISSN: | 0049-5123 |
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520 | 3 | |a Salvador Dalí never visited Prague, but in the painting The Anthropomorphic Cabinet from the year 1936 (Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf) he depicted in a corner a view of Prague, the Anglická ulice [English Street] in Prague-Vinohrady in the vicinity of the náměstí Míru [Peace Square] with the Church of St Ludmila. The original title of the painting was City of Drawers which Dalí changed to the current title before 1965. For this view he used a postcard from around 1905–1908 with the caption of the place, which was at that time still part of an independent city, Královské Vinohrady. According to Dalí, the painting is a ‘kind of allegory of psychoanalysis, which illustrates the satisfaction with which we smell the narcissistic scent of each one of our drawers’. Dalí chose the postcard because he could recognise himself in the boy in the sailor suit, and in the woman next to him he saw his mother, or perhaps his aunt, Carolineta. My hypothesis is that in the painting City of Drawers we find a narcissistic-Surrealist construction of a myth, with Dalí declaring Prague to be his territory since his childhood, in reaction to the successful visit to Prague by André Breton in 1935, because at that time he rivalled Breton for the role of the leading surrealist. The message of this picture was not addressed to any beholder; rather, it was a case of narcissistic self-reassurance. Later, this meaning lost its relevance, and Dalí changed the title | |
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id | DE-604.BV048924825 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T21:55:42Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:50:01Z |
institution | BVB |
issn | 0049-5123 |
language | English |
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physical | 4 Illustrationen |
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spelling | Bartilla, Stefan 1965- Verfasser (DE-588)130398365 aut Prague - the city of drawers Stefan Bartilla, Prague [2022] 4 Illustrationen txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Salvador Dalí never visited Prague, but in the painting The Anthropomorphic Cabinet from the year 1936 (Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf) he depicted in a corner a view of Prague, the Anglická ulice [English Street] in Prague-Vinohrady in the vicinity of the náměstí Míru [Peace Square] with the Church of St Ludmila. The original title of the painting was City of Drawers which Dalí changed to the current title before 1965. For this view he used a postcard from around 1905–1908 with the caption of the place, which was at that time still part of an independent city, Královské Vinohrady. According to Dalí, the painting is a ‘kind of allegory of psychoanalysis, which illustrates the satisfaction with which we smell the narcissistic scent of each one of our drawers’. Dalí chose the postcard because he could recognise himself in the boy in the sailor suit, and in the woman next to him he saw his mother, or perhaps his aunt, Carolineta. My hypothesis is that in the painting City of Drawers we find a narcissistic-Surrealist construction of a myth, with Dalí declaring Prague to be his territory since his childhood, in reaction to the successful visit to Prague by André Breton in 1935, because at that time he rivalled Breton for the role of the leading surrealist. The message of this picture was not addressed to any beholder; rather, it was a case of narcissistic self-reassurance. Later, this meaning lost its relevance, and Dalí changed the title Dalí, Salvador 1904-1989 (DE-588)118523481 gnd rswk-swf Breton, André 1896-1966 (DE-588)118515187 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte 1936 gnd rswk-swf Narzissmus (DE-588)4041248-9 gnd rswk-swf Surrealismus (DE-588)4058665-0 gnd rswk-swf Malerei (DE-588)4037220-0 gnd rswk-swf Prag Motiv (DE-588)4207848-9 gnd rswk-swf Dalí, Salvador 1904-1989 (DE-588)118523481 p Malerei (DE-588)4037220-0 s Prag Motiv (DE-588)4207848-9 s Surrealismus (DE-588)4058665-0 s Narzissmus (DE-588)4041248-9 s Geschichte 1936 z DE-604 Breton, André 1896-1966 (DE-588)118515187 p volume:70 number:4 year:2022 pages:406-416 Umění Praha, 2022 70, 4 (2022), Seite 406-416 (DE-604)BV002565731 0049-5123 (DE-600)128632-8 |
spellingShingle | Bartilla, Stefan 1965- Prague - the city of drawers Dalí, Salvador 1904-1989 (DE-588)118523481 gnd Breton, André 1896-1966 (DE-588)118515187 gnd Narzissmus (DE-588)4041248-9 gnd Surrealismus (DE-588)4058665-0 gnd Malerei (DE-588)4037220-0 gnd Prag Motiv (DE-588)4207848-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)118523481 (DE-588)118515187 (DE-588)4041248-9 (DE-588)4058665-0 (DE-588)4037220-0 (DE-588)4207848-9 |
title | Prague - the city of drawers |
title_auth | Prague - the city of drawers |
title_exact_search | Prague - the city of drawers |
title_exact_search_txtP | Prague - the city of drawers |
title_full | Prague - the city of drawers Stefan Bartilla, Prague |
title_fullStr | Prague - the city of drawers Stefan Bartilla, Prague |
title_full_unstemmed | Prague - the city of drawers Stefan Bartilla, Prague |
title_short | Prague - the city of drawers |
title_sort | prague the city of drawers |
topic | Dalí, Salvador 1904-1989 (DE-588)118523481 gnd Breton, André 1896-1966 (DE-588)118515187 gnd Narzissmus (DE-588)4041248-9 gnd Surrealismus (DE-588)4058665-0 gnd Malerei (DE-588)4037220-0 gnd Prag Motiv (DE-588)4207848-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Dalí, Salvador 1904-1989 Breton, André 1896-1966 Narzissmus Surrealismus Malerei Prag Motiv |
work_keys_str_mv | AT bartillastefan praguethecityofdrawers |