Comparing The Works Of Salvador Dali And Vladimir Kush

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The artists of the Surrealist movement strive to take everyday objects or thoughts and turn them into dream-like, unrealistic paintings. Salvador Dali and Vladimir Kush are two of the great Surrealist painters. Salvador Dali and Vladimir Kush are most known for their abilities to look at objects laying around and creating different and new combinations in a painting. Dali and Kush created many different paintings, but they did create similar paintings such as: Dali’s The Ship with Butterfly Sails and Kush’s Fauna in La Mancha. The two paintings, which were created by renowned artists, encompass the ideals and mannerisms of the Surrealist movement. These paintings offer similar views with the butterflies, but deciding which one is the best is …show more content…

One technique he used was his placement of colors. By putting the brightest variety of colors on the butterfly sails, he draws the viewer’s eyes to his main point first. He uses quick decisive brush strokes on the ship to create the texture and color of the wooden siding. He uses one horizon line instead of several to give the ship the illusion that it is heading out to the open water. The shape the clouds create texture and movement. Again drawing the viewer’s eyes to the main point and create the impression the wind is blowing the butterflies which moves the boat in a certain direction. The wind socks also help by implying the wind’s movement. Dali also uses an implied light source rather than a visible light source. He implies this by having shadows on the water, having parts of the boat brighter than the rest, and having a part of the sky is a slightly lighter shade of blue. These techniques he employed in this painting all help to contribute to his …show more content…

Kush stuck to his surrealist ideals, like Dali, by combining ordinary objects to make them extraordinary. Unlike Dali, Kush didn’t create the publics’ perfect image of windmills, because not many people dream of the perfect windmill like they do for a beach day. Kush’s use of the clouds helps the surrealist effect because he used cotton-ball thick clouds. By using this type of cloud, Kush made the sky look less realistic because clouds rarely have the cotton-ball shape to them. Kush probably chose the size of the butterflies to give the painting the depth it needed to make it look three dimensional. He also probably chose butterflies because they have four points like real blades of a windmill

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