About The Work
This artwork represents the episode narrated in the Third Chapter of the Book of Exodus in which God reveals himself to Moses in the form of a burning brumble. Moses was on the Oreb Mountain to graze his flock and he was intrigued by the sight of a burning bush. God spoke to him telling him to save teh Jew People from the slavery in Egypt. According to theologians, the brumble has several symbolic meanings; first of all, it is the symbol of the incorruptibility of chastity. The lithograph is part of the imponent work Biblia Sacra vulgatæ editionis published by Rizzoli-Mediolani between 1967 and 1969. It was illustrated by Salvador Dalí with a suite of 105 colored lithographs after water-color artworks. The paper sheets are signed and dated on plate, and each of them comes with a Japanese paper tissue with a printed biblical quotation. The works also demonstrate Dalí’s artistic spontaneity in the use of the “bulletism” technique, a Dalinian invention where an arquebus (a type of ancient gun) is loaded with ink-filled capsules and then fired against blank sheets of paper.
In 1963, Biblia Sacra was commissioned by Giuseppe Albaretto, a very pious man, who was one of Dalí’s closest friends and patrons between the 1950s and the 1960s. Giuseppe Albaretto and his wife Mara commissioned several of Dalí's works, and became important publishers of his etchings and lithographs, including the Biblia Sacra. Through these commissions, Albaretto hoped that Dalí would reconcile with religion. The friendship between the Albarettos and Salvador Dalí provided the art world with some of the most spectacular Surrealist artworks. These works are a few of the most desirable graphic works ever created by the artist. In the preface of the work, the publisher asserts that the lithographs “configure, in both a universal and a personal way, the dynamic vision that characterizes the relationship between men and God”.
Courtesy of Wallector Srl
About Salvador Dalí
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Find your ideal match among these wedding-themed works
- Interviews & Features: The Artspace Group Show: Dance
- News & Events: The 13 Most-Read Artspace Articles of 2018
- Art 101: Six Reasons to Collect Salvador Dalí's Prints
- Art 101: A One-Sided Love Story: 3 Artworks Based on the Myth of Narcissus
Original Lithograph
19.37 x 13.27 x 0.04 in
49.2 x 33.7 x 0.1 cm
This work comes with a Certificate of Authenticity provided by Wallector.
About The Work
This artwork represents the episode narrated in the Third Chapter of the Book of Exodus in which God reveals himself to Moses in the form of a burning brumble. Moses was on the Oreb Mountain to graze his flock and he was intrigued by the sight of a burning bush. God spoke to him telling him to save teh Jew People from the slavery in Egypt. According to theologians, the brumble has several symbolic meanings; first of all, it is the symbol of the incorruptibility of chastity. The lithograph is part of the imponent work Biblia Sacra vulgatæ editionis published by Rizzoli-Mediolani between 1967 and 1969. It was illustrated by Salvador Dalí with a suite of 105 colored lithographs after water-color artworks. The paper sheets are signed and dated on plate, and each of them comes with a Japanese paper tissue with a printed biblical quotation. The works also demonstrate Dalí’s artistic spontaneity in the use of the “bulletism” technique, a Dalinian invention where an arquebus (a type of ancient gun) is loaded with ink-filled capsules and then fired against blank sheets of paper.
In 1963, Biblia Sacra was commissioned by Giuseppe Albaretto, a very pious man, who was one of Dalí’s closest friends and patrons between the 1950s and the 1960s. Giuseppe Albaretto and his wife Mara commissioned several of Dalí's works, and became important publishers of his etchings and lithographs, including the Biblia Sacra. Through these commissions, Albaretto hoped that Dalí would reconcile with religion. The friendship between the Albarettos and Salvador Dalí provided the art world with some of the most spectacular Surrealist artworks. These works are a few of the most desirable graphic works ever created by the artist. In the preface of the work, the publisher asserts that the lithographs “configure, in both a universal and a personal way, the dynamic vision that characterizes the relationship between men and God”.
Courtesy of Wallector Srl
About Salvador Dalí
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Find your ideal match among these wedding-themed works
- Interviews & Features: The Artspace Group Show: Dance
- News & Events: The 13 Most-Read Artspace Articles of 2018
- Art 101: Six Reasons to Collect Salvador Dalí's Prints
- Art 101: A One-Sided Love Story: 3 Artworks Based on the Myth of Narcissus
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