Dali’s elephants
Surus the war elephant, as some of you may know, belonged to
a much older time frame, and its connection to the artist Salvadore Dali, who
was born centuries later is quite interesting, to say the least. Some years
ago, many news reports were published about the gifting of an elephant to Dali
by Air India in return for the little giveaway sculpture designed by Dali. This
article will touch upon that event, and also cover some antecedents, Dali’s
preoccupation with elephants, and the events which followed the arrival of the
baby pachyderm in Switzerland.
But before we get to the 20th century, let us get to know the war elephant Surus with a broken tusk. He was believed to be one of the last war elephants, part of the Carthaginian general Hannibal's army. While most people believed it to be a Syrian African elephant, it may have had Indian origins. Many believed, based on the image on a coin stuck during that time, showing the likeness of an African elephant, that Surus had African origins, added to the fact that Surus meant Syrian. However, we also know that the Ptolemies had seized Indian elephants in Syria during their wars, so Surus was most likely an Indian war elephant, who found its way to Carthage, from Egypt. Anyway, as the story goes, Hannibal Barca rode on Surus, during his march to Rome around 218 B.C. His force, which marched from Spain, comprising 100,000 men and some 37-38 elephants, apparently crossed the Alps, creating quite a furor at all the mountain villages they passed. This legendary crossing of the Alps is still hotly debated as hard evidence of it has not been forthcoming. Nevertheless, that is not our topic for the day, it is Dali.
Salvador Dali (born 1904) was a prominent Spanish surrealist painter born in Catalonia and resident of Madrid, quite popular and considered an eccentric and a dandy. Art lovers mention that he was influenced by several different artistic styles, including Metaphysics and Cubism. Dali’s developing style continued to be influenced by Picasso and Joan Miró. The biggest influence in his life was Gala, whom he met in 1929, and married in 1934. Gala was not only a great influence and his muse but also his business manager. Dali’s surrealist work could appear to be striking and bizarre for many of us, he was outlandish at times and stated once that his “love of everything that is gilded and excessive, my passion for luxury and my love of oriental clothes” to an “Arab lineage”, claiming that his ancestors were descended from the Moors.
It is said that the elephants in his works were inspired by
Gian Lorenzo Bernini's sculpture based in Rome of an elephant carrying an
ancient obelisk. His painting ‘Swans reflecting elephants’ from 1937 projects
an intriguing picture - Here, the three swans in front of bleak, leafless trees
are reflected in the lake so that the swans' necks become the elephants'
trunks, the swans' bodies become the elephants' ears, and the trees become the
legs of the elephants. But it was in 1946 that he pictured a few of them differently
in his oil on canvas work, The Temptation of Saint Anthony. Here he
stretched their legs as if on stilts, much like a giraffe, and pictured them as
Space Elephants.
The Temptations painting was made when he decided to partake
in a US filmmaker’s contest. The winning painting was to figure in a film
taken from the story, ‘Bel Ami’ by Guy de Maupassant. While Max Ernst won the contest,
Dalà did not, but his work produced a masterpiece.
Repeating the motif again in 1948, he did the sketch ‘The
Elephants’ as a backdrop study for the ballet As you Like it. The
collection brochure by Robert and Nicolas Descharnes explains - In the
Dalian menagerie, the elephant occupies a preponderant place. For Dali, this
tranquil and slow pachyderm lacked aerial grace. In just a few strokes, Dali
cured this God-given weakness: what could be more elegant than co graft the
legs and hooves of a giraffe onto the greatest animal on earth? His normal
behavior of course was completely upset. One could easily imagine Surus, the
personal elephant of Hannibal, changing into such a beast, crossing the plain
of the Ampurdan to conquer the Alps in a graceful balance with his trunk
pointed skywards. This is the majestic representation of the Space Elephant,
crowned by an obelisk and appearing to be a twin brother of a richly armored
elephant of the troupe painted by Dali in 1946 in the painting, The Temptation of
Saint Anthony.
In 1973, he installed a concrete sculpture of an elephant in
Gala’s castle at Pubol and in 1980 the Space elephant versions in bronze and
various paintings were completed. The
elephant theme appears various times in Dalà ‘s artworks of the 40-70s, and I
have tried to collate some of the images I could find. Surely there are more,
these are just some examples.
In 1970, Salvatore Dali, fascinated by the Hannibal story and Surus, sketched out The Hannibal crossing. Dalà captures the entire troupe of elephants as they walk along the bank of the river below the Alpine mountains.
But his fascination with the Hannibal story started well before that and is connected to Air India. It all came together when Dali met with the Air India PR manager Jot Singh in New York. Air India wanted an exclusive gift to be designed by Dali and Dali affirmed his interest by stating that he could do a porcelain double image-based porcelain ashtray with a shell-shaped center and a serpent around the perimeter supported by two surrealist headstands--a swan on one side and elephant on the other. Incidentally, the design of the ashtray was based on a work Dali had produced in 1937, the painting called Swans Reflecting Elephants and Dali explained the ashtray design thus: “The reflection of the elephant appears to be a swan and the reflection of the swan appears to be an elephant. That is what I have done for the ashtray”.
When it came to fees, Air India stalwarts mention that Dali asked for an elephant! Why? " I wish to keep him in my olive grove and watch the patterns of shadows the moonlight makes through the twigs on his back," he is reported to have said. Gala promptly added, ‘and $10,000’. Dali provided the concept, and Jules Teissonniere decorated and finished the design, had them manufactured at Limoges in France. Air India ordered 500 of these Elephant Swan ashtrays, for their top clients!
Now for the payment part – the elephant. Air India’s deputy
commercial director, went looking to Byculla zoo for a baby elephant, only to
be told that they didn’t have one to spare. She finally acquired one from the Bangalore
zoo and Air India flew it to Switzerland, together with its mahout. Dali’s plan
was to cross the Alps on his back, Hannibal like, but the more practical Gala
put a stop to that idea, and Surus (thus named after Hannibal’s war elephant)
was on a flight to Basel in Switzerland.
The next part of the story comes from the Deputy Chancellor,
State of Geneva Mr Claude Bonard, who
kindly translated an old article of his for me – He narrates slightly differently,
thus – Dali known for his passions and a sense of happening, wanted to
repeat the feat of Hannibal who would have crossed the Alps with his army and
his war elephants in 218 BC, during the second Punic war led against Rome. It
was the airline Air India which, sensing a good move and having ordered
ashtrays signed by Dali (pardon me!) for its first-class passengers, offered to
provide the elephant to the Master.
One fine day in 1967, the owner of the Meyrin carousel,
Alain Jaggi, son of the well-known sculptor Luc Jaggi, received a phone call
from an Air India representative in Cointrin who asked him if he would be able
to accommodate an elephant in one of the boxes at his riding school. After
a few moments of hesitation, Alain Jaggi accepted. This was the start of the
problems and questions... how big would the elephant be? Would there be a box
high enough to house the pachyderm? How to feed and water it? And above all,
what would be the reaction of the horses in the stables......
On D-Day, in front of an audience of journalists and
press photographers, we were all a little worried in Meyrin when the convoy
arrived in the colors of Air India from which was extracted a gigantic wooden
cage carrying an elephant that arrived the day before by plane from Bangalore!
Unthinkable today, given animal protection standards!!
Great was the disappointment of the Indian sponsors and
the press because Salvador Dali who was to be present was conspicuous by his
absence. Anyway, It was important to care for the poor elephant so that he
recovered from his emotions and could be led into his box, and event which
caused a general panic in the neighboring boxes where the panicked horses
neighed and kicked against the doors.
Finally, a bit annoyed, the representatives of the
airline took possession of their baby elephant the next day. We learned later
that the poor baby elephant had continued its journey to reach Spain and (became)
the property of the painter, after which Salvador Dali posed theatrically,
perched on his baby elephant.
The Meyrin municipality archives provide additional tidbits,
following the above - On September 20, 1967, the baby elephant, baptized
Surus in homage to the bravest of Hannibal's elephants, arrived by plane in
Basel, Cointrin not having a cargo line from India. In Basel, the wooden cage
containing the baby elephant was loaded into a Renault Estafette van driven by
Air India driver Camille Yerly, heading for Meyrin, whose carousel has been
chosen as a stopover for the night. The choice of this location was made by
René Hug, Air India press officer and Surus trip coordinator, on the suggestion
of Frédéric Herzig, the company's station manager and mayor of Meyrin.
This "event" gave rise to a small ceremony of
which we have a photo (see below) and a few lines in the Journal de Genève of
September 21, 1967: "In spite of the late hour [the convoy arrived in
Meyrin several hours behind the projected schedule], the directors of Air India
International, i.e., MM. Eric Pereira, Director for Switzerland, Marcel
Alibrandi, Sales Manager, Frédéric Herzig, Station Manager, and René Hug, Press
Officer, gave a cocktail party which took place in the premises of the
carousel.
Failing to cross the Pyrenees on his back, Dali organized
a parade with the baby elephant from a hill to the town of Figueres located
below, thus symbolizing the passage of the Pyrenees. Another source added -
There was a special parade that was organized at the plaza and a special drink
that was prepared with wine and Indian tea, and pink champagne (Dali’s favorite)
was served. An Indian astrologer (perhaps a priest) was flown from Bombay to
take part in the festivities.
The Castle of Púbol or Gala Dalà Castle House-Museum, the
Salvador Dalà House Museum in Portlligat, and the Dalà Theater-Museum in
Figueres, form the Empordà Dalinian triangle. I believe Surus lived thence at
the Port lligat residence.
Tim McGirk in his book Wicked Lady thinks it was an Air
India publicity stunt and mentions the event so - Besieged by all the hustlers, Gala’s
suspicion of even her friends eventually bordered on the pathological. Reynolds
and Eleanor Morse happened to visit Port Lligat when Dali was doing a publicity
stunt for Air India. Baby elephants (there was only one) were romping on the
beach, with Dali and a dozen Hindu girls (perhaps 2 stewardesses) in sparkling
saris: Gala surveyed the spectacle with the loftiness of a maharani as the
Morses approached. Was it a publicity stunt? I think a few believed so, Tim
included, and it seems likely (befitting both parties), reading about the
receptions, the filming etc.
Surus and Dali did not, unfortunately, have a great
relationship, it was mutual non-admiration from the start, as one writer
qualified it. The mammal grew too large and cantankerous to be kept on the
grounds and eventually Dali lost interest. Even though Dali built a concrete
likeness in Emporda later, he parted ways with it in 1971, donating the
elephant to the Barcelona Zoo from where it was later moved to the Valencia
Zoo. The zoo it appears, renamed Surus, as Noi.
NY Times reported - It was the end of a four‐year hate affair between Salvador Dali, the surrealist painter, and an elephant named Surus, given to him for a promotion stunt that failed. They loathed each other at first sight, and ever since the two‐ton beast had been deposited in Dali's keeping, the artist has been trying to get rid of it. Now Dali has turned over Surus to officials of the Valencia Zoo in Barcelona. “Good riddance,” he said, giving the elephant an anything but loving look last week. “This thing did not fit into the garden of my Gothic castle. My wife prefers to have a pair of rhinoceroses, which are the most cosmic animals in the word.”
Dali’s wife Gala died on 10 June 1982, aged 87. After her death, Dalà moved from Figueres to the castle in Púbol, where she was entombed, and became quite despondent. In November 1988, Dalà entered the hospital with heart issues. On the morning of 23 January 1989, he passed away at the age of 84.
Now there is always someone out there who would wonder what
happened to the original Surus, the majestic single-tusked elephant who wore a
red blanket with a red shield– He is mentioned as the bravest elephant in the
army by Marcus Porcius Cato, the elder in his book Origines. Aimee Jean LaFon
adds - A line in Pliny’s Historia Naturalis mentions Surus, stating that “Cato,
in his Annals, while he [had] passed over in silence the names of the generals,
[had] given that of an elephant called Surus, which fought with the greatest
valour in the Carthaginian army, and had lost one of its tusks. Since Hannibal
was eventually blinded in his infected eye, he rode his one-tusked elephant
into battle for fifteen more years until Romans captured Surus at the battle of
Zama in 202 BCE. Once captured, the Romans gave Surus an honorable discharge,
and he lived out his remaining years pastured at an estate outside of Rome.
The Elephant of Surprise: An Appraisal of Surus the Military Elephant - Aimee Jean LaFon,
Claude Bonard: When Dali's elephant stayed in Meyrin
Surus, un éléphanteau à Meyrin (1967) - Archives de la commune de Meyrin, 2016
Of Salvador Dali, Air India and Ashtrays – Reema Gehi – Parsi Khabar
You can see the video of Dali and the Surus arrival here
Trivia
African elephants have rounded heads, while Asian elephants have a twin-domed head, which means there's a divot line running up the head? African elephants have much larger ears, shaped a little like the continent of Africa. Asian elephants’ ears are smaller and more semi-circular. The African elephant is the larger of the two elephants, with bulls growing up to 4 meters tall. By contrast, the biggest Asian males reach no more than 3.5 meters. One interesting note on elephant height – the African elephant is tallest at the shoulder, while the Asian elephant’s tallest point is its back. Both male and female African elephants can have tusks, but only male Asian elephants have larger tusks. An African elephant’s trunk has more visible rings on it, and is not as hard to the touch as the Asian elephant's trunk. The end of their trunks is also very different – the African elephant trunk has two distinct ‘fingers’ that they use to pick up and manipulate objects. The Asian elephant has only one ‘finger’ at the end of its trunk, which they compensate for by holding objects against the underside of its trunk. An African elephant’s lower lips are short and round, whereas Asian elephants have long, tapered lower lips. The African elephants’ skin is more wrinkled than the Asian elephants’ smoother skin. African forest elephants: 5 toenails on the front feet and 4 on the back feet, African bush elephants: 4 toenails on the front feet and 3 on the back feet, Asian elephants: 5 toenails on the front feet and 4 on the back feet. African elephants tend to have more ribs than the Asian species, with up to 21 pairs of ribs vs the Asian elephant's average of 20 pairs of ribs. African elephants can live up to 70 years, and Asian elephants can live up to 48 years. (Courtesy Safaris Africana)
General Motors has developed a new autonomous
re-configurable system with potential military applications using
its fuel cell technology – It is the Silent Utility Rover Universal
Superstructure or SURUS for short. GM envisions SURUS as a system serving the
soldier, not unlike Surus served Hannibal!!
Tail note
Those interested in elephants should not miss watching the
lovely documentary - The elephant whisperer – an Oscar nominee. Kartiki &
Priscilla Gonsalves and Garima tell you the story of Bomman and Bellie, a
couple in Mudumalai, who devote their lives to caring for an orphaned baby
elephant named Raghu.
2 comments:
Thanks for the story! You write "Salvatore" in one place and "Salvador" in others. He used the Spanish/Catalonian spelling rather than the Italian, correct?
Thanks SS,
I missed that, it should be Salvadore!
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