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PHOTO: Eric Schaal, photographer Dali and Gala in the Box Office Queens Museum, from the Jean Farley Levy and Julien Levy Estate, partial gift of Eric Strom
Fishing for Compliments
Though Salvador Dali wasn't allowed to explode giraffes in his pavilion at the 1939 New York World's Fair, he still created a prototype of avant-garde art installations. Called "The Dream of Venus," the exhibit featured a giant fish head at the entrance. Inside, visitors were greeted by a topless Venus sprawled on a bed under a canopy of umbrellas and rubber phones. Her "dream" comprised dances performed by females clad in bikinis comprising real lobsters. The cavorting included mermaids at the bottom of a water-filled tank who played with a rubber female figurine painted like a piano.
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