* Vénus Spaciale - Space Venus
by Salvador DALI
* Vénus Spaciale - Space Venus
ItemNo: 1945
Medium: Bronze
Paper: See notes
Image Size: 25.6x14x12.8 inches
Released: 1977-84
Signed: Yes
Reference: Deschamps
Ref. No: 00006
Edition Size: 350
Price:

Notes
SPECIAL OFFER from private Collectors . Height: 65cm. Ref: Descharnes, Catalogue Raisonne "Sculptures & Objets. Le Dur et le Mou". Page 232, ref. 591. Editor: Inter Art Resources, London. Green Patina. Cast No 213/350 By Paul Chimera - Dali Historian. Mr. Chimera worked directly with Dali Museum founder Reynolds Morse, as the publicity director of the original Dali Museum when it was located in Beachwood, Ohio. As it did in the medium of prints, “Space Venus” presents us with one of Salvador Dali’s most seemingly bizarre images ? And we can’t take our eyes off of it! This tantalizing, curiously seductive sculpture in green patina features Venus, the goddess of beauty ? A subject that is central to two other iconic works: Dali’s Venus de Milo in Drawers sculpture, and his masterful oil painting, The Hallucinogenic Toreador. In the present Space Venus sculpture, we might interpret Venus divided torso as symbolic of the fragile nature of beauty. Similarly, the soft watch oozing off her neck perhaps represents the transient nature of beauty and the flesh, while the hard permanence of the rest of the sculpted body might reflect the more enduring aspects of great art, which transcends time. The egg is a popular element in various Dali works, generally symbolizing life and the creative spirit. And finally, the ants are reminders of our mortality and impermanence subjects with which Dali was preoccupied no, make that obsessed virtually all his life. Space Venus is a supreme example of not just surrealism, but Dalinian surrealism! Venus is the goddess of beauty, and Dali pays homage to the female figure by adding his own special elements. The underlying form in this sculpture is of a classic marble statue of a female torso, to which have been added four Dalinian elements: a soft watch, an egg, two ants and a separation of the body into two parts. The watch is draped over the neck to give us two opposing messages; that beauty of the flesh is temporary and will vanish, while beauty of art is timeless and eternal. The ants are reminders of human mortality and impermanence. The Space Venus is divided onto two parts to reveal the egg, which like the ant, is a favourite Dalinian theme given the duality of uts hard exterior and soft interior. The egg is a positive symbol and represents life, renewal, continuation and the future. Venus is the goddess of beauty and Dalí pays homage to the female figure and his attraction to female beauty in this sculpture, by adding his own surreal elements. The underlying form in this sculpture is of a classic female torso, to which four Dalinian symbols are added: a soft watch, ants, an egg and a separation of the body into two parts. The watch is draped over the neck to give us two opposing messages, that beauty of the flesh is temporary and will vanish, while beauty of art is timeless and eternal. Ants crawl across the abdomen; they are symbols of decay and decomposition. Dalì watched ants as a child with both fascination and repulsion, he used them often in his oeuvre, and they serve as a reminder of human mortality. The sculpture is divided into two, revealing an egg. The egg is a favorite Dalinian theme given the duality of its hard exterior and soft interior and is a positive symbol. It represents life, renewal, continuation and the future. On the clock face the numbers five and eleven are missing, did Dalí wish to indicate the date he was born?