The Mahlstedt Gallery


415 Huguenot St, New Rochelle, New York 10801
914-246-0526

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The Mahlstedt Gallery is a full-service art gallery representing and managing leading & emerging artists from around the world with an exclusive art collection of thousands of original & inspiring artworks.

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    Limited-Edition Bronze Sculptures by Salvador Dali Are Available for Purchase Through the Mahlstedt Gallery in New York

    The Mahlstedt Gallery is partnering with the famous Swiss art gallery Galerie Alexander E. Räber in Zurich, to sell the sculptures throughout North America. The melting clock motif frequently used in Salvador Dalí’s (1904-1989) work is seen in his bronze sculpture Profile of Time. NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y., UNITED STATES, December 2, 2020 /EINPresswire.com/ -- The Mahlstedt Gallery, a leading brick and mortar and online fine art gallery in suburban Westchester County, New York, has entered into a collaboration with the famous Swiss art gallery Galerie Alexander E. Räber in Zurich, one that allows the Mahlstedt Gallery to represent a rare and extensive collection of limited-edition, bronze sculptures that are numbered by the renowned Spanish surrealist Salvador Dalí (1904-1989). The Mahlstedt Gallery will fill orders for the sculptures from buyers across all of North America. “It is our privilege to provide Dalí’s works to collectors, interior designers and art enthusiasts throughout North America,” said Oshi Rabin, founder and owner of the Mahlstedt Gallery and herself an artist. “Buyers can be certain that each work is one of a limited number created by one of history’s preeminent artists. These sculptures are limited editions; just 350 of each exist.” A few of Salvador Dalí’s iconic sculptures available through the Mahlstedt Gallery include the following: Bronze sculpture Adam and Eve by Salvador Dalí (1904-1989) captures the moment of drama in the creation story. ● Adam and Eve, a work in which Dalí captures the moment Adam is deciding whether to take the apple from Eve. Between the two figures, the serpent expectantly looks to Adam while coiled in the shape of a heart. Dalí explores religion in many of his works. ● Profile of Time, featuring Dalí’s iconic melting clock motif first seen in his famous painting The Persistence of Memory. The sculpture presents a watch whose face is highlighted with green patina and is liquefying from its perch on top of a tree branch. ● Two bronzes each boast a vibrant blue patina. The flamenco dancer depicted in Dalinian Dancer is surrounded by the swirling fabric of her blue dress. In Triumphant Angel, an angel…