cheval à la montre molle sculpture dali

TECHNICAL INFORMATION

TECHNIQUE

Bronze, Lost Wax Process

HEIGHT

44 cm

EDITION

350 + 35 EA

DATE OF EDITION

Conceived in 1980
First cast in 1980

PATINA

Brown

REFERENCE

R. & N. Descharnes Salvador Dali Sculptures & Objects. Eccart. Ref. 650, page 250.

Description

In ‘La Vie Secrète’, Dali’s autobiographie published in 1942, the artist stated “The mechanical object was to become my worst enemy, and as for watches, they would have to be soft, or not to be at all!”. Dali believed that humans cannot rely on the non-dreaming or “real” world to show the absolute truth. This theme is evident in his sculpture Horse Saddled with Time. The hotde, one of the famous Dalinian images, is saddled with Dalinian time: it is time which controls all of man’s passage. Man believes he is in control of the voyage, but it is always “time” who is the ultimate rider. The famous melted whatch is used in place of a normal saddle. This surrealist beast can not be ridden or tamed by man, only admired for its beauty and perpetuity. The horse is portayed as the representation of life weighted down and harnessed by time symbolic of man’s fleeting voyage through life.