Salvador Dalí's "The Voyeur," created around 1921, showcases his early experimentation with Cubism and Expressionism. Dalí's gouache on cardboard painting demonstrates his talent for creating captivating compositions.
In "The Voyeur," Dalí depicts a surreptitious figure in a voyeurism scene. The composition is fragmented and distorted, reminiscent of Cubist influences, with angular forms and fractured perspectives heightening the sense of unease and tension.
The voyeur's intense and focused gaze draws viewers into the painting, inviting them to reflect on the act of looking and being looked at.
The work foreshadows the surrealistic elements that would come to define Dalí's later style, hinting at the artist's fascination with the subconscious mind and the dreamlike realms of imagination.
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