Sprache: Spanisch
Verlag: Gredos, Madrid, 1995
Anbieter: Llera Díaz-Corralejo, Madrid, MADRI, Spanien
Cartoné Editorial. Zustand: Bien. 326 págs. Versión española de José Mª Díaz-Regañón López. Exlibris estampillado de anterior propietario. Expurgo.
München Rogner & Bernard 1974 Bound, cloth with original dustjacket (protected with removable cellophane), 533pp., 17x24.5cm., ills. in b/w., in very good condition. As new! This volume brings together the collected writings of the Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí, spanning his early manifestos, essays and reflections on art, photography, cinema and psychoanalysis. It begins with his avant-garde manifestos in Spain?such as the ?Yellow Manifesto? of 1928?and traces his evolving ideas from Futurism and Modernism to his mature Surrealist phase. Dalí explores the photographic image as a ?pure creation of the mind?, discusses his films like An Andalusian Dog and The Golden Age, reflects on psychoanalysis, aesthetics and his ?critical-paranoid method? The volume is richly illustrated with black-and-white images and includes previously unpublished magazine pieces, brochures and youth writings, many translated for the first time into German. It offers both the scholar and the reader interested in Surrealism a key source for Dalí?s literary thinking and gives insight into his thought-processes over decades. The appendix provides selected secondary literature to situate Dalí?s work in its historical and theoretical context.