I find it amusing that the media back then is practically the same as is now, riling up rumors that two people are enemies out of a friendly banter between the two, and taking only a part of a quote and misrepresenting it. Also funny how Picasso basically called Dali fascist as a retort to how the latter called him communist, when Picasso himself was an unabashed communist.
I knew Bob Ross. I painted with Bob Ross. And Dali? You're no Bob Ross. Let's see Dali have a happy accident and turn it into a lush forest. Let's see Dali proudly sporting a White man's Afro. Let's see Dali try to complete a painting with a squirrel running around in his pants. I rest my case.
@@TecatoFilms Do you know any Spanish? Because you can clearly speak Spanish with a thick Catalan accent. If you do, you usually speak Catalan regularly too. Lived there for 4 years lol.
@@SirZafiroYeah, I'm puertorrican. My native tongue is spanish. There are accents and distinct differences in ANY given language depending on regions and countries, but I didn't think his accent was particularly thick or unique. Es un acento catalán como el de cualquier nativo. Digo que es un lenguaje, no un acento, porque me da la impresión de que el comentador original no habla el idioma y solo le sorprende el acento porque le parece exótico.
@@TecatoFilms puede seer (soy chileno hermano jsk), pero tiene razón de cualquier manera. Ahora que lo pienso, es posible que si no has estado mucho tiempo en España no te llame tanto la atención? Yo lo encuentro demasiado catalán, y estoy seguro de que la mayoría de gente de por allá estaría de acuerdo. Dalí es como el estereotipo de "eres tan catalán que casi traduces cada palabra al hablar español", lo que naturalmente se asocia a un acento pesado.
Beautiful and thank you for putting it up Samuel. Hearing the opinion of one of the greatest artist of the 20th century made my feel good.On a more general comment, as societies we don't value artists very much yet when civilizations disappear, it is the art that defines them.
These comments are just trolling on fifth gear. Noone talks about how intelligently he conveyed his view without disrespecting his colleagues and he seemed like a genuinely affectionate person. A good artist.
This is beautiful & a profound turn of humor at the end. The purposefully intended misinterpretation from Dali on Picasso's metaphor leaves playful territory open in spirit between the two. But he delivered it with such reverence & respect. A true gentleman.
mufodao Wow, I’ve loved Paprika for a while. We’d make great friends. Would ask that I knew what executives to talk to!! I try to write my fiction surreal to upload on my channel like my piece Millie Knox.
Jess C It would take a few years probably too, it wouldn’t be easy, period. I’d pray the filmmakers of Loving Vincent would cover a Dali biopic next but unlikely. Glad I thought of it anyway.
@@simohartikainen562 The EU has nothing to do with what you learn in school tho, and actually one of the chore principles of the EU is to support every country's culture, so please inform yourself before you spread that anti-EU missinformation.
Veo que solo hay un comentario en español, en fin me parece que tanto uno como otro fueron unos maravillosos artistas, y es un tesoro tener esta prueba sonora para verlo.
@John Nada Of course the Stones were always ahead by far. Better music, more consistency, more resilient. They even liked the Beatles, (who knows why because most of their lyrics are bland, shallow and mellow). Even they invited John Lennon for the Circus Album.
All this about him being crazy and unstable don't hold water here. Listening to him in Spanish he seems like anyone off the street his age, very normal sounding and sane.
Hmm. He says that he was never part of any political group but Picasso was a communist and that Picasso mentions that "I can's see more than the Falange of that hand" which brings us to the point of this book; “In his detailed and excellent book on Dali, Ian Gibson has documented Dali’s identification with fascism in Spain from the very beginning. ((The Shameful Life of Salvador Dali, Faber and Faber, 1997). During the civil war, Dali never came out in support of the Republic. He did not collaborate, for example, in the Paris Fair in 1937, where Picasso presented his Guernica, aimed at raising funds for the Republican cause. And he soon made explicit his sympathies for the fascist coup of 1936 and for the dictatorship that it established in a letter to Buñuel, a well-known filmmaker in Spain. He made explicit and known his admiration for the figure and writing of the founder of the Spanish fascist party (La Falange), José Antonio Primo de Rivera, and used in his speeches and writings the fascist narrative and expressions (such as the fascist call “Arriba España”), referring to the special role Spain had in promoting the imperial dreams over other nations. He sympathized with the anti-Semitic views of Hitler and celebrated Franco’s alliance with Hitler and Mussolini against France, Great Britain and the United States. He also welcomed the “solution to the national problem” in vogue in Nazi and fascist circles at that time.”
If I would have ever met him I don't think I would have been able to not ask for a painting or a drawing or something, everything he did blows my mind.
Funny story I heard about Dali. He used to draw a small painting on checks when paying at restaurants because he knew people would not cash in a Dali drawing... That way he got to eat for free many times!
@@JNovoa-cu4pv He wasn't a fascist. He didn't care about politics. Fascism ruled in Spain then and Dali didn't want any problems. Even though, in this video he clearly says that he is not Falangista (part of the Spanish fascist movement).
Lot of people are debating dali's politics but overall he comes off as an opportunist without any solid ideology. He was a communist in his youth and was arrested by de Rivera, and later supported franco and the monarchy when they were victorious. He just followed where ever the wind was blowing.
The grandfather of one of my best friends used to sagnate Dali when he was old (i live in Dali's birth city) and he told us he always whined about Picasso and that he was obsessed with him, always wanting to be better than Picasso.
About "the falange" quote, Picasso was talking about the political party ruling Francoist Spain. It is a pun using the homonymic in spanish between the political party and the finger phalanx of the hand that Dali was figuratively taking Picasso with. Picasso was meaning that the dictatorship wanted him back to Spain for propagandistic reasons and Dali was helping them
So it does seem like they had political disagreements, but were still good friends regardless. That is what I gathered at least. Would be curious if others know more about the situation.
Anyone who has bothered to read about Picasso, and not just take Dali at his word, will know that Picasso (by far the greater artist) was disgusted by Dali's embrace of fascism and Catholicism (there wasn't much of a distinction in Spain). Picasso was far from alone in his disgust.
Nearly all people on the loosing side of the war felt that way, after all it was a war between brothers, when they hate each other they do it with fierce intensity.
@@jmiquelmb The right won the war, the republican side was much more genocidal: with the clergy, murdering priests, raping nuns, hunting witches in the cities; in their withdrawal they perpetrated the greatest massacres, as in Paracuellos. @Kasparoscar what justice are you talking about? If you don't want to forget what our grandparents did, if u want another civil war, then we will come back y volveremos a pasar.
He seems really serious and more coherent than in the usual interviews. Was this done in Spain in Franco' s time? Wasn't risky to discuss this political issues? I mean that would air on tv?
Dali was brilliant. Check out his book about his ideas: "The Secret Life of Salvador Dalí". He more than held his own against Andre Breton and the other writers of the Surrealist group to which he had a connection early on.
When you’re native Spanish speaker but still read the subtitles because you are used to
I was gonna comment the same thing lol thought I was the only one 🤣
Alma Reyes Una española le responde a un español en inglés. Que cojones JAJA
@@klidas7502 yessss I que pues no dijo nada en español de todas maneras.
Pablo Rubio quien te dijo que soy español?
No sé si seas español, lo que sí sé es que Yandhi nunca salió 😢
I find it amusing that the media back then is practically the same as is now, riling up rumors that two people are enemies out of a friendly banter between the two, and taking only a part of a quote and misrepresenting it.
Also funny how Picasso basically called Dali fascist as a retort to how the latter called him communist, when Picasso himself was an unabashed communist.
I like how he interrupted the journo.
It wasn't how you are saying it was. This journalist is one of the greatest professionals of Spanish tv ever.
Dali was a closet fascist.
@@ChodeMaster not so closeted since he was pretty chummy with Franco. 😧
@@ABlindRabbit franco was a great man
Dali should start streaming on twitch like that bob ross fella
Of course im joking
Lollllk underated comment
Kinda late
I don't like a mix to be of your nasty zeitgeist and way of living with that of Dalí.
I knew Bob Ross. I painted with Bob Ross. And Dali? You're no Bob Ross.
Let's see Dali have a happy accident and turn it into a lush forest.
Let's see Dali proudly sporting a White man's Afro.
Let's see Dali try to complete a painting with a squirrel running around in his pants.
I rest my case.
Proud of these two Spanish masters of painting, and their significant contribution to the art
do you consider Picasso an artist or a graphic fraudster?
También tenemos a Goya, Velázquez, Murillo, Zurbarán, etc
@@robertotedd pero estos son los dos más reconocidos y en la misma época
Dali is Catalan not Spanish
I like Dali too much
He seems very creative, he should try painting something.
I think he tried that. Unfortunately he only became world renown and had his paintings highly sought after. It's just a token accomplisent.
@AppleGameID ok boomer
@AppleGameID ok chef
@AppleGameID ok, Gen Z.
that was so pulled out of an ass
It's kinda weird seeing an epic historical figure in "live action"
That's some thick catalan accent
Like everyone in Catalonia lol
Not an accent, a language. lol
@@TecatoFilms Do you know any Spanish? Because you can clearly speak Spanish with a thick Catalan accent. If you do, you usually speak Catalan regularly too. Lived there for 4 years lol.
@@SirZafiroYeah, I'm puertorrican. My native tongue is spanish. There are accents and distinct differences in ANY given language depending on regions and countries, but I didn't think his accent was particularly thick or unique. Es un acento catalán como el de cualquier nativo. Digo que es un lenguaje, no un acento, porque me da la impresión de que el comentador original no habla el idioma y solo le sorprende el acento porque le parece exótico.
@@TecatoFilms puede seer (soy chileno hermano jsk), pero tiene razón de cualquier manera. Ahora que lo pienso, es posible que si no has estado mucho tiempo en España no te llame tanto la atención? Yo lo encuentro demasiado catalán, y estoy seguro de que la mayoría de gente de por allá estaría de acuerdo. Dalí es como el estereotipo de "eres tan catalán que casi traduces cada palabra al hablar español", lo que naturalmente se asocia a un acento pesado.
I speak Spanish but I force myself to read the substitles to prove how accurate they are
I only checked it when he said he didn't care a penis (I know it doesn't translate all that well and that's why they must have changed it)
Good way to improve english
MOOD
And do you think the subitle is very accurate?
@@men_del12 For the most part its very acurate!
Beautiful and thank you for putting it up Samuel. Hearing the opinion of one of the greatest artist of the 20th century made my feel good.On a more general comment, as societies we don't value artists very much yet when civilizations disappear, it is the art that defines them.
I never thought I would hear his voice
These comments are just trolling on fifth gear. Noone talks about how intelligently he conveyed his view without disrespecting his colleagues and he seemed like a genuinely affectionate person. A good artist.
Asscop
This is beautiful & a profound turn of humor at the end. The purposefully intended misinterpretation from Dali on Picasso's metaphor leaves playful territory open in spirit between the two. But he delivered it with such reverence & respect. A true gentleman.
Dalí muchas gracias por todos tu hermosos cuadros y por haber existido!!!!!
- Picasso said a beautiful thing about me.
- What was it?
- He accused me of being a fascist, but he said it in a very cool and creative way.
My new favorite line "abslutamente falso " 🤣
Sorry about the wrong spelling
This man has some potential. If only he had a much better social media presence.
What ?😂😂😂😂
" I added two fried eggs so on top of the fried eggs he added a corncob "
@Francisco Parra Ear of corn? yeah, thats a corncob dude.
Sureal
That's a penis
🍳🌽🍳
How long until Dali or Picasso get a painting based movie like Van Gogh did???
mufodao Wow, I’ve loved Paprika for a while. We’d make great friends. Would ask that I knew what executives to talk to!! I try to write my fiction surreal to upload on my channel like my piece Millie Knox.
Jess C It would take a few years probably too, it wouldn’t be easy, period. I’d pray the filmmakers of Loving Vincent would cover a Dali biopic next but unlikely. Glad I thought of it anyway.
Jess C Tricky but some directors thrive on challenges. Julie Taymor could and likely would want to do it justice, after Frida.
@@corey-bird3489 I would say Terry Gilliam. He's been pretty much warming up to it throughout his whole career.
Corey Messick There is this series called “Genius” from national geographic about the life of Picasso, played by Antonio Banderas.
Great, thanks to share with us!
The interviewer is the same in "JULIO CORTAZAR AND JUAN RULFO"?
@@Cinemateket-DronningensGate yehp
estos dos hombres tenían un amor al arte tan grande, que superaba cualquier cosa
Yo no creo que le tuvieran amor al arte. Yo creo que ellos eran arte.
Los admiradores del arte somos quienes le tenemos amor al arte.
This comment section makes me feel like we learn way too little about spanish history in school, even in europe.
I know right, kids deffending fascism openly.
@@Kasparoscar idk what kind of gay liberal you are but pls stfu anime profile pic
@@ferbsol2334 don't be rude bitch
@@simohartikainen562 The EU has nothing to do with what you learn in school tho, and actually one of the chore principles of the EU is to support every country's culture, so please inform yourself before you spread that anti-EU missinformation.
It's called the dumbing down of the world...in essence the world "leaders," want to repeat history which never turns out great for the citizenry.
Dali, Goya, Picasso, and Velasquez son los mejores !
Siempre la controversia pero los dos fueron grandes maestros y no tenían porque estar enemistados el arte es un universo
My FAV artist EVER. 💜🌹💞
Thanks for this
The FALANGE part went over everybody's head...
Are a you a falangistfobic?
@@mathiasovelar637 No, cause it's not irrational fear, it's historically well documented.
The old unicorn aye?
@leahcim38 I believe he suggested that he had given or been given the middle finger ...
@@mathiasovelar637 omg you got educated
The greatest rapper of the world, pitbull always said : Dali
Veo que solo hay un comentario en español, en fin me parece que tanto uno como otro fueron unos maravillosos artistas, y es un tesoro tener esta prueba sonora para verlo.
This nonexistent rivalry Picasso vs Dali is at the same level of The Rolling Stones vs The Beatles.
Picasso's rival was definitely Mattisse, But also had incredible respect for one another.
Also Micheal Jackson and Prince.
@John Nada Of course the Stones were always ahead by far. Better music, more consistency, more resilient. They even liked the Beatles, (who knows why because most of their lyrics are bland, shallow and mellow). Even they invited John Lennon for the Circus Album.
@John Nada As it must be.
the beatles are just a decent fun pop band that made sweet ditties,if you think theyre more than that then you have to listen to more music
Great video, thank you so much for the translation
Muy buenas sus respuestas..nunca h sido seguidora d Dali pero aqui lo h visto muy coherente y m ha gustado
Sehr gutes Video!!! Endlich mal eine sehr gute Übersetzung.
Muchas gracias 💭🌟🌌
Dali the great
0:46, wrong translation: it it is not 'anthropological', it is 'anthropomorphic'
El dice "antropolorfica" una mezcla entre antropomórfica y antropológica jajaja
3Swallow How many graves he had? Is it the same amount with the museums? I knew the one he is buried under the floor.
Still better than all the youtuber's clarification videos
All this about him being crazy and unstable don't hold water here. Listening to him in Spanish he seems like anyone off the street his age, very normal sounding and sane.
Yeah , he wasnt crazy, never was
@@ignacioclerici5341 He did love to cultivate that image though. But then again, it was good marketing so why wouldn't he?
@@olivercuenca4109 exactly, it was just a charachter he created, it helped him in every thing
wow the sound quality is good, I didn't realize at first that was the interviewer talking I thought that was a voiceover from now
Hmm. He says that he was never part of any political group but Picasso was a communist and that Picasso mentions that "I can's see more than the Falange of that hand" which brings us to the point of this book;
“In his detailed and excellent book on Dali, Ian Gibson has documented Dali’s identification with fascism in Spain from the very beginning. ((The Shameful Life of Salvador Dali, Faber and Faber, 1997). During the civil war, Dali never came out in support of the Republic. He did not collaborate, for example, in the Paris Fair in 1937, where Picasso presented his Guernica, aimed at raising funds for the Republican cause. And he soon made explicit his sympathies for the fascist coup of 1936 and for the dictatorship that it established in a letter to Buñuel, a well-known filmmaker in Spain. He made explicit and known his admiration for the figure and writing of the founder of the Spanish fascist party (La Falange), José Antonio Primo de Rivera, and used in his speeches and writings the fascist narrative and expressions (such as the fascist call “Arriba España”), referring to the special role Spain had in promoting the imperial dreams over other nations. He sympathized with the anti-Semitic views of Hitler and celebrated Franco’s alliance with Hitler and Mussolini against France, Great Britain and the United States. He also welcomed the “solution to the national problem” in vogue in Nazi and fascist circles at that time.”
Dalí y Picasso haciendo colaboraciones mucho antes que fuera mainstream o que generara hype
Lil Picasso ft. Yung Dali
Subtitles: we couldn't care less if he is
Dali: We don't give a dick about him beeing
What can I say Dali and Picasso are truly genius 👏
What is the name of the collaboration he mentioned in the video? Or where can I find it?
Fun fact: Salvador Dali designed Chupa Chups logo
If I would have ever met him I don't think I would have been able to not ask for a painting or a drawing or something, everything he did blows my mind.
Funny story I heard about Dali. He used to draw a small painting on checks when paying at restaurants because he knew people would not cash in a Dali drawing... That way he got to eat for free many times!
I'm lusophone and this is probably the spanish accent that I had the easiest time to understand.
Catala accent
I love how I can understand him
Dali is my favorite artist.. abstract, and nightmarish; even if that wasn’t his intentions, or his expressions.
I love the phrase: Picasso was comunist Dalí neither :v
Dalí was a fascist
@@JNovoa-cu4pv Both are the same thing
Un papulince jajaj
@@JNovoa-cu4pv He wasn't a fascist. He didn't care about politics. Fascism ruled in Spain then and Dali didn't want any problems. Even though, in this video he clearly says that he is not Falangista (part of the Spanish fascist movement).
@@omenow Yes he was a fascist. He wouldn't say it there when everything had been left behind. But he indeed was a fascist and a nazi enthusiastic.
Lot of people are debating dali's politics but overall he comes off as an opportunist without any solid ideology. He was a communist in his youth and was arrested by de Rivera, and later supported franco and the monarchy when they were victorious. He just followed where ever the wind was blowing.
Thanks, I didn't know that.
Journalists: Talking shit about talented people since forever!
Most sane interview I've seen of him...
Even though I can understand Spanish, for some reason I keep reading the subtitles
He was monarchy anarchist
Alfonso G. Ancap
The communist bit, the ‘yo tampoco’ … it’s apparently where Gainsbourg got the idea from for Je t’aime (moi non plus).
wow!! That Catalan accent is so thick!!!
Gold
Hard to believe that no movie has been made on Dali and Gala...
The grandfather of one of my best friends used to sagnate Dali when he was old (i live in Dali's birth city) and he told us he always whined about Picasso and that he was obsessed with him, always wanting to be better than Picasso.
Natural healthy rivalry.
The corncob on the two fried eggs are beautiful
Two genius ❤️
Se puede oír su acento catalán.
Al igual que a un andaluz, gallego,canario,extremeño, asturiano etc. Se le reconoce su acento...¡listillo!
Que se te ve el plumero Baldomero.
About "the falange" quote, Picasso was talking about the political party ruling Francoist Spain. It is a pun using the homonymic in spanish between the political party and the finger phalanx of the hand that Dali was figuratively taking Picasso with. Picasso was meaning that the dictatorship wanted him back to Spain for propagandistic reasons and Dali was helping them
Un puto genio mi paisano !! Picasso era muy grande pero este era Dios !!
Man salvador would have made such a good batman butler
1:24 Here he didn't say I couldn't care less. He said "I don't care a dick" xd
si, si ... claro, claro...
Genial hombre!
Does anyone know about the collaboration he spoke about between them?... The chair with the fried eggs on, in London??... I'd love to see that,
*Anthropromorphical, not "Anthropological".
Thats what he said. "Antropológica"
Ciber Sombrero he says "antropomórfica". @Mikhail is correct, though the word in english is 'anthropomorphic.'
But somehow they want to be treated as some kind of better people.
So it does seem like they had political disagreements, but were still good friends regardless. That is what I gathered at least. Would be curious if others know more about the situation.
he is great
I don't care, I just love to see a coherent Dali talking his mother tongue.
GRANDIOSO DALI !!!!! DIVINA LOCURA !!!!
First time I ever heard Dali talk, strange
First time I heard Dali so serious. I guest he must have upset at the myth that he and his beloved Picasso were rivals.
Just imagining two eggs and corn by dali and picasso they were definitely upto something 😅😂
Jajaja Picaso es español, yo también, Picasso es un genio yo también, Picasso es un comunista yo tampoco jajajajaj que grande
He looks like actor Michael Caine at first glance...
where can one find this painting collab with the fried eggs and corn cob?
video: a
comments: I'm spanish but I read the subtitles
Que grande dali
This guy should be home painting
Very weak comment
You should be home in the kitchen
Back to kitchen with you
I believe also that Dali was in a nasty copyright dispute with Carol Channing.
👍❤❤❤❤💯
Another interesting yt reccommendation
Anyone who has bothered to read about Picasso, and not just take Dali at his word, will know that Picasso (by far the greater artist) was disgusted by Dali's embrace of fascism and Catholicism (there wasn't much of a distinction in Spain). Picasso was far from alone in his disgust.
Nearly all people on the loosing side of the war felt that way, after all it was a war between brothers, when they hate each other they do it with fierce intensity.
YES
El virgen Picasso vs el Chad Dalí
@0:46: He said "anthropomorphic", not "anthropological".
Which year?
when was this interview originally done?
Dali and Picasso both said disparaging things about each other over the years. Also Dali did support Franco. So he's not completely honest here.
well, after millions of dead people because of politics you could guess intelligent people must learn to forget
@@elpelicanojiji Yes, I suppose you are right.
@@elpelicanojiji Forget before making justice and killing all the fascists still ongoing? No, thanks.
@@elpelicanojiji Condiering that the regime that has killed more people in Spain is Francoism, by a large margin, what you say makes no sense.
@@jmiquelmb The right won the war, the republican side was much more genocidal: with the clergy, murdering priests, raping nuns, hunting witches in the cities; in their withdrawal they perpetrated the greatest massacres, as in Paracuellos. @Kasparoscar what justice are you talking about? If you don't want to forget what our grandparents did, if u want another civil war, then we will come back y volveremos a pasar.
He seems really serious and more coherent than in the usual interviews. Was this done in Spain in Franco' s time? Wasn't risky to discuss this political issues? I mean that would air on tv?
Franco was dead already, this interview was in 1977 and franco died in 75
After the 60's Spain was more free than the USA under the left nowadays.
Dali was brilliant. Check out his book about his ideas: "The Secret Life of Salvador Dalí". He more than held his own against Andre Breton and the other writers of the Surrealist group to which he had a connection early on.
The great Dali
"Solo los tontos dicen la verdad"....Quien habra sentenciado aquello........
Velazquez was their linchpin.
He wasn’t a Falangist but a Monarchist and I do love that
Picasso shade level was diss track worthy
colabs entre artistas en tiempos de dali y picasso: yo pongo una silla, y yo pongo dos huevos
Being a Falangist really wasn’t cool anymore by that point
It's wordplay in Spanish. He didn't actually say he was a falangist
He was a victim of communist in spain, so pretty normal... his sister was raped and tortured by communist before spanish war.
@@korosuke1788 Tho, he was.
@@thesapphirem5469 Sure, bro, get going.