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  • Salvador Dalí, Complexe d'Oedipe (Oedipus Complex), 1930

    Complexe d'Oedipe (Oedipus Complex), 1930

    Pastel on paper
    61.3 by 50.2 cm (24⅛ by 19¾ in.)
    71765
    Executed in 1930. Sigmund Freud first introduced the term “Oedipus complex” in a 1910 paper titled 'A Special Type of Choice of Object Made by Men”—describing the psychological phenomenon in...
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    Executed in 1930.


    Sigmund Freud first introduced the term “Oedipus complex” in a 1910 paper
    titled "A Special Type of Choice of Object Made by Men”—describing the psychological
    phenomenon in which sons have erotic feelings towards their mothers while simultaneously
    viewing their father with hostility as a rival. This text was subsequently translated
    into Spanish in the early 1920s, during Dalí’s student days at the Real
    Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando, where the artist was an early
    reader of and advocate for Freud’s psychoanalytical theories.



    Dalí’s 1930 pastel, Oedipus Complex, shows a large yellow rock with
    seven shallow cavities carved out —each evocatively inscribed ma mère—the
    French word for mother. The artist’s own mother had died when he was only a
    teenager, with his father going on to remarry his deceased wife’s sister. The
    ballon-like rocks which refer to the landscape of the artist’s native
    Catalonia first appeared in the late 1920s, including in The Enigma of
    Desire
    (1929) which also bears the heartrending inscription of ma mère
    throughout.




    In Oedipus Complex, congregated near the center of the form are a swarm of ants,
    alluding to Dalí’s ever present fear of death and decay. The scene is further
    populated by a mysterious white figure who stares out at the sea, while an
    ocean line billows out plumes of smoke in the far distance. A solitary plant
    is overturned in the foreground, discordantly placed in a domestic vase but adrift
    in a barren landscape. The present work is world unto itself populated with hallucinatory
    objects.




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