In the context of an artist. Like, let's say, Dali's "melting clocks" painting; we would call that his (blank), AKA his most recognizable/meaningful/popular/"epic" work.
I think there is, perhaps, a French/Latin term Americans use? I'm not sure...
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In the context of an artist. Like, let's say, Dali's "melting clocks" painting; we would call that his (blank), AKA his most recognizable/meaningful/popular/"epic" work. I think there is, perhaps, a French/Latin term Americans use? I'm not sure... |
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To my mind, magnum opus stands far above the rest as the term one would use in this context. |
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In musical contexts, a “most recognizable work” often is called a signature tune. For example, Benny Goodman's signature tune, or theme song, was Let's Dance, “based on Invitation to the Dance by Carl Maria von Weber”; Louis Armstrong's was When It's Sleepytime Down South; Tommy Dorsey's was I'm Getting Sentimental Over You (as shown in bigbandlibrary's themesongs list). |
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Dalí’s Persistence of Memory is considered to be his signature work; it’s the painting that people most commonly associate with him. Here, signature is used in this sense:
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That would be Dali's pièce de résistance:
Wiktionary's definition reads:
The thesaurus has more suggestions including the magnum opus suggested in the comments. |
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The French term chef-d’œuvre is regularly used in English to mean masterpiece. Its literal translation is chief or principal work. |
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Here, masterpiece is an appropriate word. |
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