Salvador Dalí Museum Figueres travel guide: he lived, loved, created with a larger than life approach
- Cookie & Keller

- Dec 13, 2013
- 4 min read
Updated: Apr 1

NOT ONE, BUT THREE MUSEUMS PAY HOMAGE, CELEBRATE DALI, INTRIGUE VISITORS
In the heart of Figueres, the legacy of Salvador Dalí comes vividly to life in one of the most unusual museums in the world. The Dalí Theatre-Museum is more than a gallery—it’s a surreal experience designed by Dalí himself, where melting clocks, dreamlike installations, and bold eccentricity blur the line between art and imagination. Visiting this iconic destination offers travelers a deeper look into the mind of a genius who transformed an entire town into a living canvas.
“Without an audience, without the presence of spectators, these.... would not fulfill the function for which they came into being.
The viewer, then, is the ultimate artist.”
Salvador Dali, 1959.
STORY By CHRISTENE MEYERS
PHOTOS By BRUCE KELLER
The Carpe Diem Kids
Salvador Dalí Museum Figueres travel guide
There are museums, and then there are experiences that completely reshape how you see art and the Dalí Theatre-Museum is firmly the latter. Designed by Salvador Dalí himself, this striking, eccentric landmark rises from the heart of Figueres like something out of a dream.
From its iconic red walls crowned with giant eggs to its maze of mind-bending installations, the museum invites visitors into Dalí’s imagination—where melting clocks, optical illusions, and unexpected symbolism challenge reality at every turn. Visiting here isn’t just about viewing art; it’s about stepping inside the mind of one of the most unconventional artists in history
MENTION Spain's flashy Salvador Dali and what comes to mind?

The clock face melting off the table, the elaborately manicured mustache, the piercing eyes, a sense of regal daring in everything he did.
Dali pushed the envelope in the art world and in his personal life. He teased, flirted, played. He made his audience think. He was a fine painter, capable of elegant representational work, but he achieved international attention through his splashy surrealist creations: “The Eye of Time” with its piercing and glittering clock face as eye. His own playful “soft” self-portrait, with bacon!

An art lover is dwarfed by a gigantic female figure atop a Cadillac, with boat and palm. One of Dali's favorite cars lends mystery to the place. |
THE BASKET of bread, inching its way off the table is an apt metaphor for Dali. He walked a high wire in the art world, maintaining his balance when taking artistic chances. His partner and eventual wife, Gala, inspired his “Atomic Leda” and “Galarina,” for she was his lover, muse and soul mate, model for many of his fantastic and fanciful works.
WHAT FUN he would have been to interview, perhaps in one of his lavish sculpture gardens, surrounded by antiques that he and his enthusiastic partner collected throughout Europe.
DALI WAS born in a beautiful corner of rural Spain in 1904 and lived to be 85, spending his most fertile period with Gala, whom he married in 1958. Together, they created three museums. One was developed from a castle with elephant sculptures adorning a labyrinth of huts built by fishermen and woven together by the couple between 1930 and 1970.

VISITORS MAY enjoy myriad aspects of Dali’s life in all three museums, which emphasize his insistence that the visitor/viewer participate in the aesthetic experience by entering Dali’s eccentric world. Our entree into his world began in Figueres, with his enchanting brick and egg-festooned museum and theater. One enters through a massive courtyard with a Cadillac and giant female sculpture of a winged Venus.
LIKE DALI, the figure is over the top. In many respects, the artist lived a “normal” life. He had one major, long relationship, stayed mostly in his beloved birth land, and cultivated passions for food, travel, theater and art.

A detail from Dali's "Palace of the Wind" ceiling includes Dali himself. |
But “normal” obviously bored him, so his Cadillac sports a mythic woman, rising to greet the beyond. A palm tree holds up a boat. A woman’s golden locks are, upon closer inspection, dozens of corn stalks. From a close-up perch, a sculpture resembles a couch. But at long range it becomes Mae West’s lips. Each tableau intrigues.

Cookie and Keller at Parador Aiguablava on the Dali trail. |
DALI DIED in 1989, but his legacy lives on through a foundation which preserves his work in the three splendid and lavish venues. In Figueres, the Dali Theatre-Museum, inaugurated in 1974, presents his broad-range of work in a “more is more” theme. From that imperious giant Venus figure with Cadillac in the courtyard, framed by the palm and boat, to the Mae West room and the world of Dali is opulent, glittery, energetic and fun! Come with us to visit the other two Dali venues!
COMING UP: Dali's world offers the visitor a fascinating aesthetic experience, but museums are only part of it. Add food, sun, vino, antiquities as we travel through Dali country to a unique parador on the rugged Costa Brava. Dali's love of food and wine is explored through our own "taste tests" then we visit a 12th Century village which inspired Dali, and revel in sunlit pleasures of a remote corner of eastern Spain. Remember to explore, learn and live, and visit us
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