There are several museums in Madrid that together form an “Art Walk” with works by Dali figuring prominently. The Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, seen below in a Google Earth image, is home to many of his works. Above is “The Basket of Bread”, from 1926, an astonishingly realistic depiction. The museum also has “The Great Masturbator” (1929), “Portrait of Luis Bunuel” (1924), “Cubist Self-Portrait” (1923) and “Girl Standing at the Window” (1925).


Dalí returned to the bakery in 1945 for another delectable work, also called “The Basket of Bread”, in which some commentators see more of the “rich symbolism attached to bread” and wax poetic about the doughy ornamentation at the Teatro-Museo Dalí in Figueras.
Dalí once commissioned the celebrated Parisian baker Lionel Poilâne to make him a bread frame for a painting, then several chairs and then a four-poster bed. “It was beautiful,” Poilâne recalled years later. The colour was so intense — a brown, woody shade. I made a spectacular bird cage for him with a real bird inside. The bird ate his way out and flew away. It was very poetic.”
Dalí’s reaction: “Poilâne, he is the living Frenchman that I prefer.”
The baker had his own artistic inventiveness, and hung bread chandeliers, complete with electrical fittings, in both of his stores. The original shop, founded by his father in 1932, remains at 8 rue de la Cherche-Midi, though Lionel died with his wife when the helicopter he was piloting crashed off the coast of Brittany in 2002. The official website of his shop, now run by his daughter, is here, and the Wikipedia entry on him here.