Born in 1904, Dalí spent his summers on Spain’s northeast coast. He attended art school in Madrid and became an excellent draftsman. In the late 1920s, Dalí met other Surrealist poets, writers, and painters. He became obsessed with dreams and slept with a canvas next to his bed so he could record his dreams as soon as he woke up.
In 1931, Dalí completed The Persistence of Memory, above. The artist works in a highly realistic style, yet the painting’s eerie subjects—melting clocks, swarming ants, and a distorted face that many believe is a self-portrait—contrast that realism. Today, experts believe that the landscape in the background is based on the coastal region where Dalí spent much of his youth.
In the early 1950s, Dalí revisited this dreamscape in his The Disintegration of the Persistence of Memory, cover. Geometric forms float across the fractured scene, and parts of the composition appear to be underwater. How do these details contribute to the dreamlike world Dalí creates?