Facts about Salvador Dali

It’s been over a decade since the Salvador Dali passed away… but the legend remains as vivid as it always has been. His real name was Salvador Domingo Felipe Jacinto Dalí i Domènech. He was born in the 11th of May in 1904. He was among the most outstanding Spanish Catalan surrealist painter of all times.

Dalí happened to be a highly skilled draftsman. And the guy was rather well known for all the striking as well as bizarre images he introduced in many of his amazing surrealist work. He had painterly skills that were sometimes attributed to clear influences of some renowned Renaissance masters. His well known work was The Persistence of Memory, which he completed in early 1930s. The expansive artistic repertoire Dalí included film, sculpture, as well as photography. These came alongside various artists in diverse media. Dalí boldly attributed his claim that his ancestors happened to be direct descents of the Moors.

There were lots of amazing things about Salvador Dali, but the most notable one was his sky high imaginative power. He also showed a strong empathy for joining in odd and extravagant behavior, for drawing the attention of the public to him. This at times annoyed those who liked his artworks in so far as it annoyed the critics who disliked his artworks. That’s because his eccentric mannerism at times drew more civic attention than his artwork did.

Dalí took birth in small town in Figueres, which is now in the region of Empordà and pretty near from the then French border around Catalonia of Spain. The older brother of Dalí's was also called Salvador and died of gastroenteritis. Dali’s father was Dalí i Cusí, who lead a decent middle-class lifestyle as a lawyer and public notary. The father had imposed highly strict punitive approach towards his son. But Dali was highly encouraged by his mother Felipa D. Ferrés about the artistic endeavors he held from his very childhood.

When Dali turned five, he was taken to the grave of his brother and his parents told him that they believed Dali was the rebirth of his brother. Amazingly enough, Dali started believing in this fallacy. Dalí had a sister too. Her name was Ana María and she was only 3 years younger than Dali. In the late 1940s, she authored a book glorifying her brother. The book was titled Dalí As Seen By His Sister. Dali is full of surprises and odds. The more you research about Salvador Dali, the more you will realize this!

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