The transformation of Narcissus was made by oil painting of Salvador Dali in 1937. The picture uses many images to express its meaning. For example, people, hands, water, dogs hungry, chess boards, canyons and cliffs, and people. This is not to divert the thesis, to divert the audience from the meaning and point of view of the proposal, but to rotate in the air on both sides of the coin, to repair everything, to support the hope that hope and despair mutually reflect Or wait for destruction.
Comparison of Kafka's "Metamorphosis" and "Dali's Daffodil Deformation" I decided to compare with Franz Kafka's novel "Transformation" by Salvador Dali in 1937. Dali, like Kafka, is a mature surrealist painter who explores his own soul and dreams of his work. Dali invented a process called "delusive critical method" for painting to help his creative process. As Dali said, the purpose of his painting is to imagine that the world and the specific irrational world are similar, "to realize an irrational image with the most accurate anger of imperialism" is
The transformation of Narcissus was made by oil painting of Salvador Dali in 1937. The picture uses many images to express its meaning. For example, people, hands, water, dogs hungry, chess boards, canyons and cliffs, and people. This is to support the hope that hope and despair mutually reflect, rather than filling in the thesis or diverting the audience from the meaning and point of view of the proposal.
Between 1936 and 1937, Salvador Dali created one of the most famous paintings of daffodilatosis. Through his life, he cultivated quirkiness and expressionism (one of his most famous performances appeared in diving suits at the opening of the 1936 London Surrealist exhibition). Dali developed a delusive critical theory. He took over the theory of automation, but changed it to a more aggressive approach. According to this theory, people should develop true fantasies in clinical paranoia, leaving remnant consciousness in their minds, and the control of reason and will is intentionally discontinued.