Now the location of the Salvador Dalí House Museum, this unique abode, located in the small fishing village of Portlligat in Cadaqués, Spain, was home to the moustachioed surrealist from 1930 until his wife Gala’s death in 1982. It’s comprised of seven fisherman huts, which Dalí had renovated and knocked together to form his suitably quirky house. Outside sits one of the artist’s iconic Mae West Lips Sofas (1937), shaped after the particular pout of the American actress after which it was named, and rendered in polyurethane foam coated with crimson polidur. What we’d give to be sitting there now under the Spanish sun.