Salvador Dalí, Soft Self-Portrait with Grilled Bacon, 1941
Dalí was a Surrealist painter, meaning that he took inspirations from dreams and the subconscious to create pictures that could never exist in reality. Some of his paintings feel more like nightmares - if you look closely, there are ants crawling out of the eye and mouth of the "soft" face.
Many artists paint self-portraits to show their personality through the way they pose, what expression they make, how they're dressed, or what else they include in the picture. Dalí said that he was trying to do the opposite. Instead of painting the soul or interior he painted only his exterior, "the glove of myself."
Other self-portraits by Dalí:
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