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Les chants de Maldoror

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Les chants de Maldoror

Artist Salvador Dali (Spanish, 1904-1989)
Publisher Albert Skira (Paris, 1934)
Date1934
DimensionsBook: H: 13 3/4 in. (350 mm); W: 10 1/4 in. (260 mm); Depth: 2 1/8 in. (54 mm).
Page (untrimmed): H: 13 1/16 (332 mm); W: 9 15/16 in. (252 mm).
Element: H: 13 3/4 in. (349 mm); W: 10 9/16 in. (268 mm); Depth: 1 5/16 in. (34 mm).
Sheet (untrimmed): H: 13 in. (330 mm); W: 9 13/16 in. (250 mm).
Image: H: 11 3/4 in. (298 mm); W: 7 1/4 in. (184 mm).
MediumOriginal prints: 42 etchings, some with drypoint and/or engraving, plus an additional suite of 44 Text: letterpress (typeface: Garamond) Paper: Arches cream wove, watermarked
ClassificationBooks
Credit LineGift of Molly and Walter Bareiss
Object number
1984.367A-SS
Not on View
Collections
  • Works on Paper
Published Referencescf. Castleman, Riva. A Century of Artists Books, New York, 1994, p. 94, repr.

cf. Garvey, Eleanor M., The Artist & the Book, 1860-1960, Boston, 1961, no. 67

cf. Hogben, Carol, Rowan Watson, editors. From Manet to Hockney: Modern Artists’ Illustrated Books, London, 1985, no. 99 reprs.

Symmes, Marilyn. "Illustrated Books at The Toledo Museum of Art", The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts, Miami, winter 1988, p. 66, repr.

cf. Hallmark Gallery. Albert Skira: The Man and His Work, New York, 1966

cf. Wheeler, Monroe. Modern Painters and Sculptors as Illustrators, New York, 1946, p. 99

cf. Strachan, W. J. The Artist and the Book in France; The 20th Century livre d'artiste, New York, 1969, p. 329

cf. Johnson, Robert Flynn. Artists' Books in the Modern Era 1870--2000: The Reva and David Logan Collection of Illustrated Books, San Francisco, 2001, no. 106.

Exhibition HistoryToledo Museum of Art, The Bareiss Collection of Modern Illustrated Books from Toulouse-Lautrec to Kiefer, 1985, no. 16

Splendid Pages: The Molly and Walter Bareiss Collection of Modern Illustrated Books, Feb. 14--May 11, 2003, p. 45-46, fig. 32, p. 46

Between the Wars; Sept. 5 2008 through Dec.31 2008.

Label TextA prototype of Surrealist literature, LES CHANTS DE MALODOR, a macabre and hallucinatory narrative prose poem, was first published in 1868-69. This was Dali's first major work of original book illustration. Les Chants de Maldoror by the self-styled Comte de Lautréamont, a macabre and hallucinatory prose-poem of violence, cruelty, and perversion first published in 1869, was a text much revered by the Surrealists. Salvador Dalí, for his commissioned etchings, recycled motifs from his paintings and drawings – soft watches, decaying flesh, eroticized bodies, knives, bones, crutches, pedestals – and exploited his deep knowledge of Freudian symbols to create vivid visions of putrefaction, cannibalism, death, castration, and fetishized sex.

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