Harman Patil (Editor)

The Face of War

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Year
  
1940

Artist
  
Salvador Dali

Media
  
Oil paint

Subject
  
War

Medium
  
oil on canvas

Created
  
1940

Period
  
Surrealism

The Face of War httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenaa9The

Dimensions
  
64 cm × 79 cm (25.2 in × 31.1 in)

Location
  
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen

Similar
  
Salvador Dali artwork, Surrealist artwork, Oil paintings

The Face of War (The Visage of War; in Spanish La Cara de la Guerra) (1940) is a painting by the Spanish surrealist Salvador Dalí. It was painted during a brief period when the artist lived in California.

The trauma and the view of war had often served as inspiration for Dalí’s work. He sometimes believed his artistic vision to be premonitions of war. This work was painted between the end of the Spanish Civil War and beginning of the Second World War.

The painting depicts a disembodied face hovering against a barren desert landscape. The face is withered like that of a corpse and wears an expression of misery. In its mouth and eye sockets are identical faces. In their mouths and eyes are more identical faces in a process implied to be infinite. Swarming around the large face are biting serpents. In the lower right corner is a hand print that Dalí insisted was left by his own hand.

References

The Face of War Wikipedia