At the prospect of visiting this item, one friend, who had OD’d on Dali while working in the Tate Gallery giftshop during the big Dali exhibition in 1980, was interested but critical: ‘All tits and bums’, was her succinct summing up. I remembered weird landscapes and melting clocks. I recollected his moustache, his reputation for publicity stunts, and that he had died about two years before. I had the idea that he could still be seen embalmed and lying in state, and this added a frisson of ghoulishness to the attraction of going to Figueres. I said to myself that I didn’t really like Dali, but we were only staying 30 kilometres away. And, after all, he was a surrealist: hadn’t Benjamin written an important essay on Surrealism? The visit to Dali’s museum would also be a kind of homage to Benjamin. So we went….
The Museum building, though bizarrely decorated, merges structurally with the surrounding buildings right in the centre of Figueres. The entrance is down a narrow street which opens into a tiled Plaça surrounded by the Museum, a Library of Surrealism, and the tables and chairs of a bar. In front of the main entrance is a huge decorated tree stump, which with an egg shape for a head, looks like a seated person, head in hands. Bit and pieces of plaster and sculpture are stuck into the niches of the stump, which is closely hugged by railings. Also in the courtyard are two columns of tractor tyres, each with statues of enthroned kings on top, about thirty feet high or more. There is also a totem pole of TV sets, covered in plaster that looks like petrified semolina. The building itself is Theatre Del Arte-style, like a paper cut-out model, but full size. Golden science-fiction figures with raised hands and no features are arranged around the parapet. There are decorative eggs everywhere you look. A huge bearded head in a glass case has a TV in its forehead and dolls eyes for eyeballs. Its case is dotted with eggs stuck to the walls and floor.
Inside the building is a small courtyard surrounded by four floors of enclosed galleries and show rooms. These contain pieces of Dali’s collection, much by himself. One floor contains dozens of paintings of human shapes discovered in piles of stones. A life-size statue of a naked woman, painted to look real and with no pubic hair, is in a glass case brightly illuminated with neon lights. A nude human shape is painted on polystyrene boards, with a shell placed at the crotch. One doorway is a brightly-rouged mouth, festooned with corn-cobs. In the courtyard is a black Cadillac our of a Bogart movie, with three figures inside and a lot of ivy growing around them. There is also a column with a real fishing boat on the top, painted yellow and white, from which blue globules are suspended as if falling. All around the fourth gallery level, visible from the courtyard, are yellow reliefs of washbasins.
At the back of the courtyard on a sort of enclosed stage, serenaded by a white plaster orchestra with real instruments, is an amazing 20 foot-high portrait of Abraham Lincoln. From close up his face consists of a nude woman and a series of square blocks of colour. From afar it’s an uncanny portrait of the man. You can’t stand far enough back in the room to be able to appreciate this, and I can only tell you about it because I happened to catch sight of a postcard of the picture in the gift-shop window, from the other side of the Plaça.
There were hundreds of people, and the galleries narrow and no complete circles, so that you have to keep retracing your steps, squeezing past those behind you going forward.
Walter Benjamin died and is buried at Port Bou, on the French Catalan border, about 35 kilometres from Figueres. He was fleeing from the Nazis, and, held up by the Spanish authorities after an asthmatic climb to the border, he committed suicide, in September 1940. His life’s work, a collection of essays and notes for unfinished projects on a huge range of cultural activity, have nonetheless a consistency, which is his struggle to articulate the real complexity of the relation between history, culture, politics and human experience. His memorial is a gravestone overlooking the sea at Port Bou. His legacy is a provisional whisper of wisdom, in contrast to the shouting fairground medicine show of Dali.
I didn’t get to visit Walter Benjamin’s grave on that trip. My friends dropped me at Girona on their way to the beach, from where I planned to take the train the relatively short distance to Port Bou, but found after they had left that there was a train strike that day. Somehow, after I got over my disappointment, it seemed appropriate. Benjamin lives on in his ideas, not lying in state. Nevertheless, I said to myself, I will go there one day.
Benjamin, W. (1929, 1979 edition) Surrealism. In One Way Street and Other Writings. London: New Left Books