"Mere meters from the ocean’s edge, a white-walled villa in Port Lligat looks dreamy, but nothing out of the ordinary—until you go inside. Artist Salvador Dalí bought this place in 1930 as a single fisherman’s hut, expanding it, absorbing the neighbors’ cabins, and creating a fantastical web of bony corridors that’s like the wandering tendrils of a creature. Until 1982, it served as Dalí’s primary space for working, living, and socializing—the isolation of the ocean on one side, and his wacky, eccentric life on the inside. It’s peppered with personal mementos that make your mind boggle about his life—a taxidermy polar bear (stuffed, word has it, by Dalí himself) and several sofas shaped like lips." - Gemma Askham,Jessica Benavides Canepa