Press Release  February 6, 2020

Salvador Dalí: Gardens of the Mind

© Salvador Dalí, Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalí, (ARS), 2019

Salvador Dali, Marguerite (Chrysanthemum frutescens), Floridali (Flor Dalinae) (detail), 1968. Photo Lithography with drypoint etching. Collection of The Dalí Museum, St Petersburg, FL (USA) 2019.

SARASOTA, Fla. – The natural world fascinated Surrealist sensation Salvador Dalí (1904-1989). From February 9 through June 28, 2020, Salvador Dalí: Gardens of the Mind will showcase mind-bending floral artworks, anchored by his fantastical series of color lithographs, Flordalí, at the Marie Selby Botanical Gardens in Sarasota, Florida.

© Salvador Dalí, Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalí, (ARS), 2019

Salvador Dali, Marguerite (Chrysanthemum frutescens), Floridali (Flor Dalinae), 1968. Photo Lithography with drypoint etching. Collection of The Dalí Museum, St Petersburg, FL (USA) 2019.

Salvador Dalí: Gardens of the Mind will explore Dalí’s work through the lens of a botanical garden, illuminating how nature played a vital role in his art,” says Jennifer Rominiecki, president and CEO of Selby Gardens. “We look forward to welcoming our guests into a world inspired by Dalí’s imagination, where the playful and unexpected take center stage.”

Flordali, a rarely seen and little-known body of work by the artist, features flowers unlike any in nature” observes Dr. Carol Ockman, curator at large. “These whimsical works provide a unique entry into Dali’s Surrealist legacy, highlighting the enduring presence of his beloved Catalonian landscape as well as his debts to historic botanical illustrations and Renaissance perspective.”

Known for his artistic virtuosity, flamboyant mustache and bravura showmanship, Dalí spent his childhood in Figueres, Spain, and at the family's summer home in the coastal fishing village of Cadaqués. In later years he would live with his wife, Gala, in nearby Port Lligat. His famous spectral vistas consistently conjure this region in northeastern Spain.

© Salvador Dalí, Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalí, (ARS), 2019

Salvador Dali, Lys (Lilium musicum) (Lily), Floridali (Flor Dalinae), 1968. Photo Lithography with drypoint etching. Collection of The Dalí Museum, St Petersburg, FL (USA) 2019.

Flordalí (1968), on loan from The Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida, offers a series of outlandish blooms: a rose sprouts butterfly wings instead of leaves; a lily’s similarity to a horn-shaped gramophone generates a music-themed composition; a common dahlia morphs into a unicorn. Artifacts and photos that foreground Dalí’s life, work and relationship to nature will also be on view, along with several Dalí works on loan from the collection of Sarasota resident Keith D. Monda.

Dubbed the “next Ansel Adams” (Popular Photography, 2004), for his dramatic black and white photographs of pristine American landscapes, photographer Clyde Butcher traveled to Spain in 2017 at the request of the Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida. He visited the village of Cadaqués, where Dalí spent childhood summers, Dalí’s house in Port Lligat and the rugged region of Cap de Creus – all areas that feature prominently in Dalí’s works. Photographs from the resulting Visions of Dalí’s Spain series will also be on view as part of Gardens of the Mind.

Selby Gardens’ outdoor spaces will be transformed for the duration of the exhibition. Inspired by Dalí’s bold blending of the expected and unexpected, floral and plant displays will pay homage to the key motifs of the artist’s work, such as butterflies, eggs, eyes, crutches, mathematical concepts and landscapes.

© Salvador Dalí, Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalí, (ARS), 2019

Salvador Dali, Rosa, Floridali (Flor Dalinae), 1968. Photo Lithography with drypoint etching. Collection of The Dalí Museum, St Petersburg, FL (USA) 2019.

Salvador Dalí: Gardens of the Mind at Selby Gardens is the fourth installment of the popular Jean and Alfred Goldstein Exhibition Series, which explores the rich connections between nature and the arts. It is curated by Dr. Carol Ockman, Ph.D, Robert Sterling Clark professor of art emerita at Williams College. Past exhibitions have focused on Marc Chagall, Andy Warhol and Paul Gauguin, with unique garden design elements that connect the outdoor gardens to the indoor displays of art. The Goldstein Series is part of Selby Gardens’ Living Museum® model, implemented in 2015, which has aimed to diversify revenue sources and resulted in the retirement of more than $2 million in debt along with reinvestment in the Garden’s mission of education, horticulture and botany.

Admission to Salvador Dalí: Gardens of the Mind is included with all-access admission to Selby Gardens: $25 adults; $15 children 4-17; free for members.

Selby Gardens will present Dalí-themed lectures, performances, family programs, special tours, school curricula and additional programs that complement the exhibition. A full schedule of events will be available at www.selby.org.

Support
Salvador Dalí: Gardens of the Mind 
receives support from lead sponsors Amicus Foundation, Gulf Coast Community Foundation, Bill and Marianne McComb and Virginia Toulmin Foundation.

About Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
Marie Selby Botanical Gardens is the only botanical garden in the world dedicated to the display and study of epiphytic plants such as orchids, bromeliads, gesneriads and ferns and other tropical plants, with a focus on botany, horticulture and environmental education. Selby Gardens is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums and is a Smithsonian Affiliate. For more information, please visit www.selby.org. Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, 900 S. Palm Ave., Sarasota, is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily except Christmas. Contact us at (941) 366-5731 or selby.org. Follow Marie Selby Botanical Gardens on Facebook, Instagram and more by searching @selbygardens. 

Subscribe to our free e-letter!

Webform

Latest News

An Introduction to Art Therapy: Its History and Practice

Art has been used as an outlet for the 

10 Must-See National Pavilions in the 2024 Venice Biennale

The 60th edition of the International Art Exhibition, titled…

Rachel Jones’ Abstract Psychic Landscape of Teeth and Color

Whether it be through the image of a mouth or the emotional…