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DalΓ­

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Artist Alper Dostal revisits many of the famous works of art from around the world, and imagines them if they were to meet a hot and drippy fate.Β β€˜Art +Summer – Air Conditioner’ is the tagline of this series, and it shows Guernica, Van Gogh’s Starry Night, and many other masterpieces that are literally melting out of their frames onto the museum floor. While rather unrealistic in execution, it’s a trip to see some of these masterpieces brought to horrifying life with the addition of heat and melt.Via DesignBoom:

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When you see the work of this man, you wouldn’t really think the designer of a candy logo. But indeed, he was.

Chupa Chup photo by Flickr User p4nc0np4n

Salvador DalΓ­, the Catalonian surrealist painter, also happened to be the chief logo and wrapper designer for the lollipop, Chupa Chups.

Via FastCo Design:

Salvador DalΓ­, the wacky surrealist known for his signature pointy mustache and painting melting clocks, was also graphic designer behind the classic Chupa Chups–an enduringly sweet, bright rendition of a daisy.

The Catalan lollipop made its first appearance in 1958, when the company founder Enric Bernat hatched the idea of placing a bonbon on a stick. He called the product “GOL,” imagining the candy as a soccer ball and the open mouth a net. It didn’t go over well. So Bernat hired an ad agency that renamed his product “Chupa Chups” (from the Spanish chupar, meaning β€œto suck”). All that was left was the branding. In 1969, Bernat complained about what he had while having coffee with his artist friend–none other than Salvador DalΓ­.

According to lore, the painter went to work immediately, doodling for an hour on newspapers that were laying around. DalΓ­’s version masterfully integrated the wordmark into the daisy design, and has hardly changed since. And Phaidon points us to one subtle, extremely smart feature of the design:

Acutely aware of presentation, DalΓ­ insisted that his design be placed on top of the lolly, rather than the side, so that it could always be viewed intact. It’s proved to be one of the most enduring pieces of branding ever and one that’s still used today, four billion sales later.

What would induce the famous artist to take on such a project? Dinero. The guy rarely turned it down, causing surrealist poet AndrΓ© Breton to nickname him “Avida Dollars”–an anagram of DalΓ­’s name that roughly translates to “eager for cash.”