MBAG_Logo
DonnerDevenir
membre
Icon_Search

Dalí Chapel

10 juin 202514 juin 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 est la pièce maîtresse de la collection permanente du Beaverbrook depuis que Lady Dunn en a fait don au musée en 1959. Depuis 2017, l’œuvre possède son propre espace dans le pavillon 2017. Au fil des décennies, d’innombrables personnes sont venues au musée spécialement pour le plaisir d’admirer ce chef-d’œuvre étonnant au Nouveau-Brunswick.  

La collection permanente du Beaverbrook comprend de nombreuses œuvres présentant une imagerie religieuse, dont plusieurs s’inspirent de la Bible. Bien entendu, jusqu’au XVIe siècle, la quasi-totalité de l’art visuel occidental touchait au religieux. Les églises et les chefs religieux commandaient des peintures et des sculptures pour décorer leurs bâtiments et lieux sacrés, en signe de leur dévotion et (avec un peu d’espoir) leur vertu. Malgré la montée en importance de l’art profane, l’art religieux conservera une emprise significative sur les artistes et les mécènes après la Réforme et la Renaissance, et ce largement jusqu’aux époques romantique et moderne. 

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. 

Pour replacer 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.   

Icon_SlideUp
crossmenu