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Related: About this forumSalvador Dali's Rare 1969 Illustrations for "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland,"
Two masters of the fanciful and philosophical, together.For more than half a century, this unusual yet organic cross-pollination of genius remained an almost mythic artifact, reserved for collectors and scholars. To mark the 150th anniversary of the beloved book, Princeton University Press brought back to life the Dalí-illustrated Alices Adventures in Wonderland (public library) a crowning achievement among the greatest illustrations of the Carroll masterpiece from the century and a half since its inception, featuring new introductions by Mark Burstein, president of the Lewis Carroll Society of North America, and mathematician Thomas Banchoff, who knew and collaborated with Dalí.
The Rabbit Sends in a Little Bill
The pool of tears.
The caucus race and a long tale
The Mad Tea Party
In the introduction, Burstein considers the natural creative confluence between Carroll and the surrealists:
For both Carroll and the surrealists, what some call madness could be perceived by others as wisdom. Even the creative processes of Carroll and the surrealists were similar. The surrealists practiced automatism in their writing and drawing; Carroll called the initial telling of the tale effortless, saying that every such idea and nearly every word of the dialogue, came of itself when fancies unsought came crowding thick upon [me], or at times when the jaded Muse was goaded into action more because she had to say something than that she had something to say.
In addition, collages were a serious apparatus in the surrealists arsenal; Carroll invented the term portmanteau combining words and produced Jabberwocky, the most famous example of pure neologistic nonsense in the English language (or close to it, anyway). His bestiary of mome raths, toves, and Bread-and-butter-flies, also from Through the Looking-Glass, could easily have been products of the surrealists game of Exquisite Corpse.
Dalí himself applied a number of surrealist techniques to his interpretation of the story. To represent Alice the sole character who appears in every chapter he reused an image of a girl skipping rope that he had first painted more than thirty years earlier. He placed this strange, static, mid-motion figure, almost an icon, in each of the twelve illustration a choice that was part automatism, part cut-up technique, as if echoing Carrolls incantation from the first page: The rest next time It is next time!
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Salvador Dali's Rare 1969 Illustrations for "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland," (Original Post)
JHan
Nov 2018
OP
Love Dali.
BFA here. Loved studying the arts and applying them to canvas.
JHan
(10,173 posts)3. Do you still paint? I hope so :)
sheshe2
(87,498 posts)5. Been a long time.
No. Tried a few years ago. Lost what I had.
amywalk
(255 posts)7. You didn't lose it,
You are just a little rusty. My daughter is doing a BFA degree right now along with her father. They decided to both go back to school. My exhusband played in the NFL for 12 years, but left to go play ball before he graduated. He promised his mother he would graduate and she is 88, so times a ticking. They are having a blast together and are wonderful artists. My sister is also a great artist.
sheshe2
(87,498 posts)8. Thank you, amywalk.
Good for your husband and daughter going back to school. How cool is that. A lot of talent in one family.
Welcome to DU and Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours.
fierywoman
(8,105 posts)2. Watercolor and pen and ink? Wow!
JHan
(10,173 posts)4. really dynamic illustrations.
burrowowl
(18,023 posts)6. Far Out!
Thanks!