Maybe another link to a Dali sundial: http://www.pop.ac/ portlligat013.html

Willy LEENDERS
Hasselt in Flanders (Belgium)

www.wijzerweb.be


Op 14-mrt-08, om 14:03 heeft Robert Terwilliger het volgende geschreven:

Thanks to all who replied. Most replies came to my own mailbox and not to the list. Remember to "Reply to all".

What I was looking for was a sort of misty painting of a building with a non-descript sundial on the wall.

On other Dali sundials:

Joël Robic (and others):
For sundials in Paris you can see Andree Gotteland site (and book):
http://www2.saf-lastronomie.com/csmp/arr5n/centrea51.html

Willy LEENDERS:
The Dali sundial in Paris is not a painting.
A painting is the Salvador Dali "self portrait sundial". You find a picture at http://www.elainefineart.com/dali/self_portrait_sundial.htm

As for the painting I was seeking, I believe Richard Langley might have found it and may be forwarding a link to the list.

Dave bell sent this interesting link.
http://peregrinations.kenyon.edu/vol1-3/gower.pdf

And provided the answer:

> What timepiece has the most moving parts?

Why, an hour glass, of course!

Bob

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] koeln.de] On Behalf Of Robert Terwilliger
Sent: Thursday, March 13, 2008 7:40 PM
To: 'Sundial Mailing List'
Subject: Dali sundial +

Some time ago someone posted a link to a painting by Salvador Dali that included a sundial.

Could someone point me to it again?

== Try this: ==

Since it has none, I suppose a sundial could be considered the timepiece with the least moving parts.

What timepiece has the most moving parts?

Bob
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