This picture is an allegorical response to the Spanish Civil War from 1936 to 1939, but it is also a fantasy and eerie depiction destroying your body. Prior to the invasion of captain Franco, Dali portrayed the work, but it predicted the violence, anxiety and misfortune that many Spaniards felt during the reign of Franco. While expressing his sexuality and his political indignation, the soft structure of cooked beans is a good example of Dali's work.
Cooked beans (Civil War Bomb) (1936) is a painting by Spanish surrealist Salvador Dalí. Dali produced this work to express the fear of the Spanish civil war. Painting began just six months before the Civil War of Spain began but he insisted that the "predictive power of his subconsciousness" realized the war because of the power of the prophet. Although not completely sure, Dali may have changed the name of the postwar picture to prove the quality of the prophet
The impact of this series on Dali was revealed in 1936 following "cooked beans" (civil war prevention) which led to the case of the Civil War in Spain. Here you can see plate 39, twisted limbs reminiscent of GrandHazaña, cruel repression, painful expression, ominous clouds and so on. Come elthos! A broken body is displayed in the background of a barren landscape (heroic feat! There are dead people!). In 1993, British young artist movement Jack and Dino Chapman created 82 miniature toy sculptures based on "war disaster". These works have been widely praised and purchased by Tate Gallery. For decades, Goya's series of etching has served as a constant reference point for the Chapman brothers; in particular, they caused many changes based on the plate Grandehazaña! Come elthos! In 2003, Chapman Brothers exhibited a modified version of "War Disaster".