Daum Débris Automobile Horse by Salvador Dali - Limited Edition
The collaboration between Daum and celebrated Surrealist artist Salvador Dali began in 1968 with "La Fleur du Mal," his first piece in a long series with the atelier. The translucency of Daum's crystal paste offered Dali the appropriate medium through which to express the metamorphoses suggested to him by his "paranoid and critical" perception of reality.
In "Débris Automobile Horse," the fragments of a car are pieced together to form a blind horse with a telephone in its mouth. This piece, inspired by one of Dali's paintings, denounces the era of mechanization.
A small portion of the The Leg was Broken, and is being Fixed.
Height: 39 cm - 26.5 lbs
The collaboration between Daum and celebrated Surrealist artist Salvador Dali began in 1968 with "La Fleur du Mal," his first piece in a long series with the atelier. The translucency of Daum's crystal paste offered Dali the appropriate medium through which to express the metamorphoses suggested to him by his "paranoid and critical" perception of reality.
In "Débris Automobile Horse," the fragments of a car are pieced together to form a blind horse with a telephone in its mouth. This piece, inspired by one of Dali's paintings, denounces the era of mechanization.
A small portion of the The Leg was Broken, and is being Fixed.
Height: 39 cm - 26.5 lbs
The collaboration between Daum and celebrated Surrealist artist Salvador Dali began in 1968 with "La Fleur du Mal," his first piece in a long series with the atelier. The translucency of Daum's crystal paste offered Dali the appropriate medium through which to express the metamorphoses suggested to him by his "paranoid and critical" perception of reality.
In "Débris Automobile Horse," the fragments of a car are pieced together to form a blind horse with a telephone in its mouth. This piece, inspired by one of Dali's paintings, denounces the era of mechanization.
A small portion of the The Leg was Broken, and is being Fixed.
Height: 39 cm - 26.5 lbs