The Madonna of Port Lligat
Salvador Dalí
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The Madonna of Port Lligat by Salvador Dalí exists in two main versions, completed in 1949 and 1950, both depicting the Virgin Mary and the Christ Child in Dalí's signature surrealist style. Inspired by Renaissance depictions of the Madonna, Dalí reinterprets the traditional iconography with surrealist elements, placing the Virgin and Child in an open, floating architectural structure against the landscape of Port Lligat, Dalí’s home in Catalonia. In both versions, the Virgin’s torso is hollow, revealing a niche where the infant Christ sits, creating an eerie, mystical effect as they appear suspended within layers of open spaces.
In the 1949 version, Dalí presents a more intimate composition with smaller, detailed objects symbolizing purity and spiritual transcendence, while the 1950 version is larger and more expansive, with intensified colors and a more elaborate background.