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Dali, Salvador
Dalton Brown, Alice
Daniel, Kevin
Daumier, Honoré
David, Ashley
Dawson, Montague
Degas, Edgar
Delacroix, Eugéne
De la Tour, Georges
Delaunay, Robert
Derain, André
De Stael, Nicolas
Deymonaz, André
Dicksee, Sir Frank
Dine, Jim
Dominguez
Dougall, Jae
Dürer, Albrecht
Dufy, Raoul
Other Authors
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Salvador Dali wasn't
only a surrealist painter, he was also a writer. His style was varied,
and changed from one period to another. First of all, he was drawn
to cubism, followed by futurism, then by the metaphysics and finally
by surrealism. Dali was selfish, arrogant, touchy and distrustful:
he was a paranoid. In his surrealist phase, Dali developed a method
he named the critical-paranoiac method, which he defines as a "spontaneous
method of irrational knowledge, based on the critical-interpretive
association of delirious phenomena. It's a systematic interpretation
of the experimental matter which has a narcissistic tendency to
isolate itself." (Dali, according to "Histoire de l'art").
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