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In the upper left stands a tan phallic tower with a flag on top and two tan balls in front, a brown grouping of curly trees behind the tower. From the lower right, a slightly abstracted head and shoulders of a female with the legs and torso of a second female figure rises along the side.

The Anthropomorphic Tower

1930

Salvador Dalí Spanish, 1904-1989

Spain

Salvador Dalí created Anthropomorphic Tower at a time in his career when he aligned himself with the Surrealists and began to produce dreamlike images charged with sexual desires and anxieties. This pastel relates to a painting of the same year called The Great Masturbator (now in the Museo nacional centro de arte Reina Sofia, Madrid). While in the painting the torso is clearly male and the head female, the pastel obfuscates each form’s sexual identity. Here the palette on the right is more subdued, in contrast with the color of the tower-penis in the upper left, which is so bright as to appear almost spot lit. Dalí used the motif several times during this period. Could the figure with closed eyes on the right be dreaming or hallucinating the image of the Anthropomorphic Tower<.em>? Dalí’s image is open to interpretation, which is at the heart of Surrealist art.

Pastel and stumping on tan wove paper

Prints and Drawings