Forensics experts exhumed Salvador Dali’s remains from a tomb in his Spanish hometown on Thursday, nearly three decades after his death, in order to test a fortune-teller’s claims that she is the only daughter of the surrealist.
Working behind closed doors, they removed a slab weighing more than a tonne which covers the tomb of the artist at the Dali Theatre-Museum in Figueras in northeastern Spain where he was born.
“The biological specimens have been taken from Salvador Dali’s remains,” Catalonia’s High Court of Justice said in a statement around 11:50pm (2150 GMT).
It said Dali’s coffin had been opened at 10:20 pm so that work could begin.
The DNA samples in the form of bone or tooth fragments 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 1.1mn 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 at age 84, said.
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.
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.
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 400mn euros ($460mn) at the end of 2016.
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.