Exhumation of Salvador Dali's remains find his moustache still attached

Forensic experts in Spain have removed hair, nails and two long bones from Salvador Dali's embalmed remains to aid a court-ordered paternity test that may enable a woman who says she is the surrealist artist's daughter to claim part of his vast estate.
Workers bring a casket to the Dali Theatre Museum in Figueres.Workers bring a casket to the Dali Theatre Museum in Figueres.
Workers bring a casket to the Dali Theatre Museum in Figueres.

Officials said yesterday that the artist’s mummified remains were so well preserved that even his famous moustache had survived the passing of time and remained in “its classic shape of ten past ten,” referring to the hands on a clock.

Dali, who once said “surrealism is me”, is considered one of the founding fathers of the artistic movement. His works in paint, sculpture and cinema, among other disciplines, are shown in museums all over the world and sought by private collectors.

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The artistic genius was buried in the Dali Museum Theatre in the northeastern Spanish town of Figueres, his birthplace, when he died at 84 in 1989.

Dali. Picture: WikicommonsDali. Picture: Wikicommons
Dali. Picture: Wikicommons

The exhumation that began Thursday night followed a longstanding claim by Pilar Abel, a 61-year-old tarot card reader, who says her mother had an affair with Dali in his hometown.

In June, a Madrid judge finally ruled that a DNA test should be performed to find out whether her allegations were true.

Forensic experts opened the artist’s coffin in a sensitive operation that involved using pulleys to lift a 1.5 tonne stone slab.

Lluis Penuelas Reixach, the secretary general of the Gala-Salvador Dali Foundation, said Dali’s remains - including his moustache - are well preserved and mummified after an embalming process was applied 27 years ago.

Christ of St John of the Cross by Salvador Dalí,  hangs in Glasgows Kelvingrove Art Gallery.Christ of St John of the Cross by Salvador Dalí,  hangs in Glasgows Kelvingrove Art Gallery.
Christ of St John of the Cross by Salvador Dalí, hangs in Glasgows Kelvingrove Art Gallery.

According to judicial authorities, only five people - a judge, three coroners and an assistant - were allowed to oversee the removal of the samples out of respect for the remains and in order to avoid any contamination.

Representatives of the foundation, which manages Dali’s estate on behalf of the Spanish state, said the evidence backing Abel’s claims weren’t enough to justify the intrusive exhumation. They vowed to continue a legal battle to nullify the paternity test.

Dali and his Russian wife Gala had no children of their own, although Gala had a daughter from an earlier marriage to French poet Paul Eluard.

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Abel, who for a while made her living by reading tarot cards on local television, was born in Girona, a city close to Figueres.

She said she pressed for the exhumation because legal proof of Dali’s paternity would honour the memory of her mother.

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