Wed 5 Nov 2008
This painting is Santiago El Grande, by Salvador Dali. I love this painting. I first saw it when I visited a friend in Fredericton seventeen years ago. She took me to the Beaverbrook Art Gallery and when I first laid eyes on this painting I was blown away. You can see in the photo how big it is, and when I saw it up close I could not get over the at times almost photorealistic detail Dali managed to achieve. It was the first painting of its calibre I had ever seen.
Shortly afterward I travelled to Europe and visited the Louvre and the Musee D’Orsay, and several galleries in Florence Italy, and no painting in any of those places impressed me as much as Santiago El Grande. I bought a print of it and it hangs in my office at home. But the print is so small compared to the original that you can’t really get a sense of the painting’s majesty, or intricate detail.
I’m Fredericton right now, on a business trip. When I learned I would be going to Fredericton I knew that the one thing I had to do was see Santiago El Grande again. I hoped I would have time, and that the Gallery wouldn’t be too far from where I was staying. Turns out my hotel is the Beaverbrook Hotel… right next door to the Gallery! As soon as I checked in and deposited my bags in my room I hightailed it to the Gallery.
I had forgotten the layout of the Gallery, that you can see Santiago El Grande as soon as you step inside. There was only an hour left until close but I paid my eight bucks and went in. I spent about ten minutes staring at Santiago El Grande. As I approached the painting I overheard the final moment of a conversation another patron was having with a staff member about Dali. Once I finished admiring the painting on my own I approached the staff member and asked if he could tell me a bit about the painting.
“You’ll be sorry you asked,” he told me.
But I’m not at all sorry. It took him about fifteen minutes, but now I appreciate the painting even more. He pointed out many details that I had overlooked, such as the partial transparency of some of the figures, and how certain elements were foreshortened to give a three dimensional aspect if viewed from the right angle. He explained some of the history of the painting, how it came to be in Fredericton after the Catholic Church of Spain refused Dali’s offer of the painting. They weren’t refusing the painting so much as they were refusing the painter himself. After which Dali claims he had a dream that told him the painting belonged in a relatively obscure art gallery in Canada. And he told me much more.
Don’t pass through Fredericton without treating yourself to a glimpse of this fantastic work of art.
If I ever manage to cobble together some manner of art that’s even a thousandth as accomplished in my lifetime, I’ll be grateful.

November 6th, 2008 at 1:30 am
Very cool painting, Joe – I’ve never seen that one, nor had any idea there was such an impressive Dali in Fredericton.
That horse is so big he’s created a hurricane with his willy!
November 10th, 2008 at 3:53 pm
Joe, I never knew you for a art connoisseur.. I have always enjoyed Dali’s work .. if you have time and are in Washingto go to the National Gallery of Art. nga.gov
July 19th, 2010 at 4:49 pm
I worked 10 years in the Beaverbrook Art Gallery and I was lucky enough to be able to see the Dali collection everyday I went to work. It never ever got old for me. The Beaverbrook Art Gallery has 3 other Salvador Dali’s in the permanent collection. 2 of Sir James Dunn and 1 of Lady Dunn (all four very surreal and Daliesque). Sir James Dunn purchased Santiago El Grande for the gallery on it’s opening in 1958. As you can see Sir James Dunn was a big fan.
The one thing I could never get over in the 10 years I was there, was to see the faces of the people when they realized they were standing in front of these original Dali’s in little old Fredericton NB. Actually there are a lot of gems in the permanent collection of the BAG that other exhibition galleries across the world would love to count amongst their collections. (2) Botticelli, (2) Gainsborough, Turner, Constable, and that is just to name a few.
Yes the BAG is a little gem all on it’s own. Nobody expects it in Fredericton NB.
Thanks for reading my rant,
Bruce
July 28th, 2010 at 4:55 pm
I have one small correction to make. Santiago El Grande was not donated in 1958 for the opening of the gallery. It was donated in 1959 by James Dunn to the Beaverbrook Art Gallery