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Salvador Dalí, Femme-tiroir (Woman-Drawer), 1936
Salvador Dalí, Femme-tiroir (Woman-Drawer), 1936
Salvador Dalí, Femme-tiroir (Woman-Drawer), 1936
Salvador Dalí, Femme-tiroir (Woman-Drawer), 1936 Souvenir-Catalogue, 1936.

Femme-tiroir (Woman-Drawer), 1936

Gouache on paper
35 by 27 cm (13¾ by 10⅝ in.)
56917

Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Salvador Dalí, Femme-tiroir (Woman-Drawer), 1936
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Salvador Dalí, Femme-tiroir (Woman-Drawer), 1936
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 3 ) Salvador Dalí, Femme-tiroir (Woman-Drawer), 1936
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 4 ) Salvador Dalí, Femme-tiroir (Woman-Drawer), 1936
Executed in 1936. Femme-tiroir (1936) is an exceptional work on paper dating from the height of Salvador Dalí’s 'hand-painted dream photograph' period—his term for the illusionistic rendering of irrational, internally...
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Executed in 1936.

Femme-tiroir (1936) is an exceptional work on paper dating from the height of Salvador Dalí’s "hand-painted dream photograph" period—his term for the illusionistic rendering of irrational, internally generated imagery. The work shares its composition with Dalí’s interactive souvenir-catalogue designed for his exhibition at the Julien Levy Gallery, New York (1936–37). The souvenir-catalogue was realized as a die-cut cardboard sheet with snap-on breast covers concealing accordion-folded strips of painting reproductions, designed to be unfolded, handled, and reassembled by the viewer. The present gouache is a unique work on paper in which the same composition appears.

In Femme-tiroir, the figure is rendered in Dalí's distinctive technique of dense white lines against a black ground. The face has been replaced by an open drawer—a motif Dalí developed throughout the 1930s in direct dialogue with Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic writings, which he had immersed himself in as a student in Madrid in the 1920s. For Dalí, the human body concealed "secret drawers" accessible only through the methods of psychoanalysis; transposed here onto the body of a woman, the drawer functions as both an epistemological provocation and an erotic one, simultaneously inviting and withholding access to the unconscious.

The composition is animated by Dalí's idiosyncratic handwritten inscriptions, which read as a manifesto compressed into marginalia. The central declaration—Dalí paints the "invisible straight from nature"—encapsulates his quintessential paranoiac-critical method: the systematic, technically meticulous transcription of hallucinated or internally visualized states onto the picture surface. The surrounding phrases—"Disturbing images," "The epidermis [sic] of orchestras," "Saliva Sofas"—are characteristic exercises in Surrealist free association, offering a compressed lexicon of the obsessions that defined Dalí's work during this pivotal period.





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