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Unlike Leonardo da Vinci’s horizontal, linear depiction of the same scene, Dalà opts for a massive, dodecahedral symmetry. The painting is dominated by a transparent, polyhedral structure (a pentagonal dodecahedron) that hangs over Christ and the Apostles like a celestial canopy. Dalà believed that the dodecahedron, a shape associated with Plato’s cosmology (representing the universe or the "fifth element" – ether), was the perfect container for the divine.
In DalĂ’s La Ăšltima Cena , the true protagonist is light. A blinding, nuclear-atomic light emanates from the torso of Christ, specifically from his chest. This light floods upwards, dissolving the dodecahedron and illuminating the vast, panoramic seascape seen through the central window. DalĂ, deeply influenced by the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (which he viewed as terrifying yet sublime manifestations of divine power), replaced traditional halos with atomic particles. The apostles are not illuminated by a candle or a window, but by the inherent nuclear energy of the resurrected body. This suggests that the Last Supper is not a historical moment of sadness, but a prefiguration of the Resurrection—an explosion of spiritual energy. dali la ultima cena
Deconstructing Divinity: Geometry, Light, and Surrealism in Salvador DalĂ’s The Sacrament of the Last Supper Unlike Leonardo da Vinci’s horizontal, linear depiction of