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Dalí Chapel

June 10, 2025June 14, 2026

The Beaverbrook Art Gallery is home to what is widely considered one of Salvador Dalí’s masterpieces, what some of the leading experts in the field consider one the best works ever produced by the Spanish painter.  As Dali scholar Elliot H. King correctly notes, “no painting is so aligned with the Beaverbrook Art Gallery.” Never one to shy away from self-praise, Dalí said of this work, “It’s the greatest painting since Raphael.”  

Santiago El Grande has been a centrepiece of the Beaverbrook Art Gallery’s permanent collection since it was gifted to the gallery by Lady Dunn in 1959, and since 2017 has occupied its own space in our 2017 Pavilion. Countless visitors over the decades have come to the gallery to experience the thrill of seeing this startling painting in New Brunswick.  

The Beaverbrook’s permanent collection includes numerous works featuring religious imagery, particularly sourced from the Bible. Of course, until the 16th century, almost all western visual art was religious in theme and content. Churches and religious leaders commissioned paintings and sculptures to ornament their sacred buildings and spaces to signal both devotion and (hopeful) virtue. Following the Reformation and Renaissance, and certainly into the ensuing Romantic and Modern eras, while secular art rose in prominence, religious art still maintained a meaningful hold on artists and patrons. 

Dalí was not alone, of course, in his turn to religious imagery and themes in his post-war painting. Religious imagery has always been part of the modern project. Another masterwork in our permanent collection is by British artist Stanley Spencer, whose The Marriage at Cana: A Servant in the Kitchen Announcing the Miracle shares with Dalí a biblical source for a work that was vibrantly contemporary when it was painted in 1953. 

To provide further context for Santiago El Grande and to honour this aspect of our artistic heritage, the Beaverbrook Art Gallery has installed this selection of religious-themed works in a newly reconsidered “Dalí Chapel.” Comprising European Renaissance and Baroque works alongside Canadian and International modernism and postmodernism, we hope this offers an opportunity to compare the evolution of sacred art over many centuries, while giving a fresh view of the humanity and complexity of these examples of the religious impulse.  

Religious imagery, as interpreted by artists throughout the ages, has long served as a way for artists to express their faiths and their philosophies, to expand on tradition and to suggest novel new ways of thinking about the world. Whatever one’s personal faith, the Dalí Chapel should provide the opportunity for a visual, intellectual and imaginative journey through time.   

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