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Spanish court orders exhumation of Salvador Dali’s remains in paternity claim

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MADRID — A Spanish court has ordered that the remains of Salvador Dali be exhumed after a woman who claims to be the daughter of the world-famous artist fi led a paternity claim.

If the woman, identified as Pilar Abel and reportedly a psychic, is confirmed as the only child of Dali, she could be entitled to part of the huge fortune and heritage of one of the most celebrated and prolific painters of the 20th century.

The Madrid court said Monday the exhumation aimed “to get samples of his remains to determine whether he is the biological father of a woman from Girona (in northeaste­rn Spain) who filed a claim to be recognized as the daughter of the artist.”

“The DNA study of the painter’s corpse is necessary due to the lack of other biological or personal remains with which to perform the comparativ­e study,” it added.

The Dali Foundation which manages the artist’s estate said in a statement it would lodge an appeal against the exhumation “in the coming days,” without giving further details.

PSYCHIC

Dali is buried in his eponymous museum in Figueras, a city in the northeaste­rn region of Catalonia where he died in January 1989 of heart failure after a life marked by the genius of his work and his own eccentrici­ties and extravagan­ces.

According to media reports Abel is 61 and a psychic.

She says her mother had an affair with Dali when she worked as a nanny for another family that vacationed in Port Lligat, a tiny fishing hamlet near Cadaques on the coast where the painter lived and worked for years with his muse Gala.

“My grandmothe­r told me: ‘I know that you’re not my son’s daughter, I know that your father is a great painter and she told me his name, Dali,” Abel told Catalonia’s TV3 television channel in 2015, adding her mother later admitted this was true.

She said she had already done DNA tests with a mask that belonged to Dali, but that she did not have the results.

Her lawyer Enrique Blanquez told AFP that the affair was “known in the village, there are people who have testified before a notary.”

He said one person “worked for Dali and Dali paid her to investigat­e what she did and where the plaintiff ’s mother went.” 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.

 ??  ?? SPANISH ARTIST Salvador Dali in Paris in this file photo taken on Nov. 21, 1958 shows. A Spanish court ordered the exhumation of Dali’s remains in paternity claim on June 26.
SPANISH ARTIST Salvador Dali in Paris in this file photo taken on Nov. 21, 1958 shows. A Spanish court ordered the exhumation of Dali’s remains in paternity claim on June 26.

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