Dalí's study,
The Trinity, is a smaller painting measuring . As with
The Ecumenical Council, he displays the unity of Father, Son and Holy Spirit: God floating with his face blocked by his hand above Jesus, whose foot is extended and who points upward, with a faceless Holy Spirit. It was exhibited with
The Ecumenical Council at the Carstairs Gallery in New York in 1960, whereupon critic Michael Strauss expressed his impression that Dalí was "a very different person" from the previous creator of lascivious works of art. During the exhibition Dalí stated that
The Ecumenical Council commemorated "the greatest historical event of our time and which, prudently, I have painted before it has met". Dalí became friends with American art collectors
Albert Reynolds and Eleanor Morse in 1943. Their first purchase was Dalí's war-inspired
Daddy Longlegs of the Evening ... Hope! (1940), and after a few acquisitions from his shows, the Morses bought pieces directly from his studio. Gala sold
The Ecumenical Council to the Morses for $100,000 ($ in 2010), stipulating that it had to be paid in cash, in Spanish pesetas. The Morses originally housed their Dalí collection in a specially built wing of A.R. Morse's engineering firm in
Beachwood, Ohio. However, the size of their collection—both in number and dimensions—outgrew the facilities. The City of
St. Petersburg, Florida offered to build a museum to house and manage all the pieces. It opened as the
Salvador Dalí Museum in 1982, with 95 paintings, including other Dalí masterworks (the museum considers unusually large pieces taking two years to complete as masterpieces) such as
The Hallucinogenic Toreador (1970),
Galacidalacidesoxyribonucleicacid (1963),
Nature Morte Vivante (1956) and
The Discovery of America by Christopher Columbus.
The Ecumenical Council is currently shown in the Salvador Dalí Museum.
The Trinity is housed in the
Musei Vaticani in
Vatican City. ==See also==