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PA Images

Decades after his death, Salvador Dali's iconic moustache is still perfectly intact

A Spanish forensic expert said “his moustache appeared at 10 past 10 and his hair was intact” almost 30 years after his death.

Updated at 8.40pm

SURREALIST MASTER SALVADOR Dali’s trademark moustache is in perfect shape in its “ten past ten” position, officials said today, a day after his remains were exhumed to settle a paternity claim.

“I was very anxious about what I would see,” said Narcis Bardalet, the forensic expert who embalmed Dali back in 1989 and who was at his grave the moment he was exhumed on Thursday night for the DNA test.

“I was absolutely stunned. It was like a miracle… his moustache appeared at 10 past 10 and his hair was intact,” Bardalet added during an interview with the public television station TVE1, referring to the positions of the hands on a clock.

The arduous task of exhumation involved removing a slab weighing more than a tonne that covered his tomb at the Dali Theatre-Museum in Figueras in northeastern Spain where the eccentric artist was born.

Bardalet was one of only a handful of people including a judge allowed to watch the removal of samples from Dali’s remains.

“It was a moving moment for him and for us,” Lluis Penuelas Reixach, the secretary general of the Salvador Dali Foundation, told a press conference, in a reference to Bardalet.

DNA samples were taken from Dali’s hair, nail and two long bones, he added.

Paternity test

Spain Dali The latest twist in Salvador Dali's eccentric personal history: the exhumation pf his body to carry out a paternity test almost 30 years after his death. Manu Fernandez via PA Images Manu Fernandez via PA Images

Forensic investigators exhumed Salvador Dali’s remains from a tomb in his Spanish hometown nearly three decades after his death in order to test a fortune teller’s claims that she is the only daughter of the surrealist.

“The biological specimens have been taken from Salvador Dali’s remains,” Catalonia’s High Court of Justice said in a statement.

The DNA samples will be sent to Madrid to undergo the necessary tests.

A crowd of onlookers gathered outside the elaborate museum of Dali’s work to watch as police escorted the experts into the building which is topped by a huge metallic dome decorated with egg shapes. Dali designed the building himself.

The museum, a top tourist site that drew over 1.1 million visitors last year, was covered in some places with cloth to prevent drones from capturing images.

“A day like this arouses in me a great deal of feeling because it reminds me of the day of his death,” Maria Lorca, who was the mayor of Figueras at the time of Dali’s death in 1989.”

The eccentric artist would have enjoyed the atmosphere outside the museum, Lorca added.

“He would feel at home, it is a day that suits his way of being,” Lorca said.

A huge fortune

Pilar Abel, a 61-year-old who long worked as a psychic in Catalonia, says her mother had a relationship with the artist when she worked in Cadaques, a picturesque Spanish port where the painter lived for years.

A Madrid judge last month granted her a DNA test to find out whether her allegations are true.

Spain Dali Pilar Abel claims to be the daughter of artist Salvador Dali. Francisco Seco / PA Francisco Seco / PA / PA

If Abel is confirmed as Dali’s only child, she could be entitled to 25% of the huge fortune and heritage of one of the most celebrated and prolific painters of the 20th century, the woman’s lawyer Enrique Blanquez said.

Dali’s estate, which includes properties and hundreds of paintings, is entirely in the hands of the Spanish state.

The Salvador Dali Foundation, which manages the estate, says it was worth nearly €400 million at the end of 2016.

The Salvador Dali Foundation is to provide details of the exhumation at a press conference today.

Abel has already provided a saliva sample for comparison and the results are expected within a matter of weeks.

In an interview with AFP last month, just days after a court ordered the exhumation, Abel said her grandmother had told her she was Dali’s daughter when she was seven or eight years old. Her mother admitted it much later.

Abel is from the city of Figueras, like Dali, and she said she would often see him in the streets.

“We wouldn’t say anything, we would just look at each other. But a glance is worth a thousand words,” she said.

‘Known in the village’

A question has always hung over his sexuality, with some claiming he was a closet homosexual who preferred to watch others having sex rather than taking part.

But according to Abel’s lawyer Blanquez, his affair was “known in the village, there are people who have testified before a notary”.

Born on 11 May 1904 in Figueras to a rich family, Dali developed an interest in painting from an early age.

In 1922, he began studying at the Fine Arts Academy in Madrid where he developed his first avant-garde artistic ideas in association with poet Federico Garcia Lorca and the filmmaker Luis Bunuel.

Soon he left for Paris to join the surrealist movement, giving the school his own personal twist and rocketing to fame with works such as The Great Masturbator.

Returning to Catalonia after 12 years, he invited French poet Paul Eluard and his Russian wife Elena Ivanovna Diakonova to Cadaques.

She became his muse – he gave her the pet name Gala – and remained at his side for the rest of her life.

They never had children and she died in 1982, seven years before Dali’s death.

© – AFP, 2017

Read: Neil Armstrong’s moon bag sells for $1.8 million in New York >

Read: Chester Bennington, the lead singer of Linkin Park, has died aged 41 >

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    Mute Fon_Ellard
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    Jul 8th 2020, 3:58 PM

    I’m on the Wage Subsidy scheme I don’t want it extended – it’s benefiting employers and penalising workers who will end up with a tax bill at the end of the year. Some employers are paying their staff extra to cover the impending tax bill but others are not.

    Yes, I get the reasons for it to help employers stay in business but come on, do you think all of the companies availing of it are really in need of it or just jumping at the chance to get free labour?

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    Mute Joe
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    Jul 8th 2020, 4:03 PM

    @Fon_Ellard: : wow. That’s some grade A stupidity there!
    Do you not know that if you were taxed at source you’d just have less in your back pocket now? You should calculate what total income for the year will be, find out how much you tax you should be paying monthly and then set this aside if you’re that worried. You’re not being penalised ffs!
    I can’t believe this. You shouldn’t have a job based on your mindset!

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    Mute The quite man
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    Jul 8th 2020, 6:02 PM

    @Joe: The economy is finished, the EU central bank has estimated that our GDP will contract between 7.5% to 8.00%
    This makes the banking crisis look like pocket change. Tell me how we are going to pay back this funny money?
    There is no such thing as free money, this government is preparing for the complete breakdown that’s coming, you should do the same, get your house in order

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    Mute twimii
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    Jul 8th 2020, 6:16 PM

    @Fon_Ellard: I’m not really disagreeing with you but one thing I can tell you for sure is workers on the wage subsidy scheme will not be hit with a tax bill later. The wss is paid after tax if you get me. There is no tax due on it. I’ve checked this with Revenue. So … that’s one less thing to worry about.

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    Mute twimii
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    Jul 8th 2020, 6:17 PM

    @Fon_Ellard: I’m not really disagreeing with you but one thing I can tell you for sure is workers on the wage subsidy scheme will not be hit with a tax bill later. The wage subsidy scheme is paid after tax if you get me. There is no tax due on it. I’ve checked this with Revenue. So … that’s one less thing to worry about.

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    Mute Chris OB
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    Jul 8th 2020, 3:26 PM

    First thing they did was give themselves a rise while we pickup the bill. Pigs at the trough

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    Mute John Egan
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    Jul 8th 2020, 3:17 PM

    Promising however not addressing the elephant in the room which is the biggest hindrance to businesses operating is not solely finance but the restrictive measures/guidelines that prevents them from operating at full scale (rightly or wrongly).

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    Mute Canyon
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    Jul 8th 2020, 4:06 PM

    @John Egan: they are reviewed and discussed every week….have you been missing the massive media reports on same?

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    Mute John Egan
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    Jul 8th 2020, 5:21 PM

    @Canyon: are you mistaking reviewals to allowing businesses to open under the same regulations/conditions as businesses opened in previous phases? Or actual changes to the regulations. Because the only ‘massive media’ report was when they were debating on keeping 2m distancing or reducing to 1m….

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    Mute Richard Doherty
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    Jul 8th 2020, 3:35 PM

    Pigs will fly before fine geal implement these

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    Mute Ricky Spanish
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    Jul 8th 2020, 4:14 PM

    @Richard Doherty: that’s the spirit! Glad you’re keeping an open mind.

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    Mute Nigel o'Neill
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    Jul 8th 2020, 4:40 PM

    Loans with 4.5%+ interest… In a negative yield market!?! Shocking.. No other word

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    Mute Thomas O' Donnell
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    Jul 8th 2020, 5:41 PM

    @Nigel o’Neill: The State can borrow from the ECB at close to zero. If they issue loans to businesses at even 2%, it would surely lower their interest bills sign

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    Mute SkepticalHippoEyes
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    Jul 8th 2020, 4:01 PM

    Only in Ireland does SME stimulus come in the form of debt at about 500% markup on EU average interest rates. Small businesses need CASH, not debt or some nonsense about tax rebates in 18 months time. We’ll be dead and buried by then. RIP SME sector in Ireland.

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    Mute JJandtim Dwyer
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    Jul 8th 2020, 4:36 PM

    What about property tax waiver?

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    Mute Rex Tilson
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    Jul 8th 2020, 5:37 PM

    Tax reductions for some businesses, but not all I hope. Our local grocery shops that stayed open had a massive boost to their business. Developers used the wage subsidy scheme to slash their labour costs, assuming they will sell their units this will only add to their massive profits and if they get tax reductions I doubt they will lower the house purchase prices to reflect this.. Not all businesses need a helping hand.

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    Mute Pat Kelly
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    Jul 8th 2020, 3:51 PM

    I miss Bertie… lol..

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    Mute Joe Flaherty
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    Jul 9th 2020, 1:25 PM

    Just suppose our Government decided to waive the Tax on the Wage Subsidy for employees, imagine the spending spree that would create. They would get a big %age back indirectly and an awful lot of local businesses would benefit greatly.
    Just a thought, definitely a far better option than awarding themselves monster salary increases.

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