Love's Labour's Lost
Love's Labour's Lost is an original artwork realized by Salvador Dalì (1904-1989) in the 1970s.
Original precious etching artist proof on Japanese paper. Hand-signed by the artist in pencil on the lower right corner: Dalì. EA is inscribed in pencil on the lower left corner. From the series: "Much Ado About Shakespeare". Edition of 250 prints on Rives Paper and 250 on Japanese Paper + 25 proofs on Rives paper and 25 proofs on Japanese paper.
Reference: Michler / Löpsinger 390.
Excellent Conditions.
Love's Labour's Lost is an original artwork realized by Salvador Dalì (1904-1989) in the 1970s.
Original precious etching artist proof on Japanese paper. Hand-signed by the artist in pencil on the lower right corner: Dalì. EA is inscribed in pencil on the lower left corner. From the series: "Much Ado About Shakespeare". Edition of 250 prints on Rives Paper and 250 on Japanese Paper + 25 proofs on Rives paper and 25 proofs on Japanese paper.
Reference: Michler / Löpsinger 390.
Excellent Conditions.
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Salvador Dalì was the leader of the Surrealists’ group, which investigated the realms of the human psyche and dreams. In his paintings, sculptures, jewellery, and designs for furniture and movies, Dalí explored a deeply erotic dimension, studying the writings of Richard von Krafft-Ebing (1840-1902) and Sigmund Freud, and conceiving what he called the “paranoiac-critical method” to abet his creative process.
As he expressed it, in his painting Dalì aimed "to materialise the images of concrete irrationality with the most imperialistic fury of precision […] in order that the world of imagination and of concrete irrationality may be as objectively evident […] as that of the exterior world of phenomenal reality". Dalì strove to make the world of his paintings persuasively real – in his words, to make the irrational concrete.
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