![Dalí's face and iconic mustache on Leonardo da Vinci’s self-portrait](https://thedali.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/1200x500-Exhibit-Da-Vinci.jpg)
Dalí & da Vinci: Minds, Machines & Masterpieces
March 8, 2015 – July 26, 2015
Featuring more than 75 works and reproductions, this exhibit shows how these two great artists shared an ambition to use the tools of art to explore the whole of the human experience.
![A painting by Picasso and a similar painting by Dali with the caption, “Two legends. Side by side.”](https://thedali.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/1200x500-Exhibit-Picasso.jpg)
Picasso / Dalí, Dalí / Picasso
November 8, 2014 – February 22, 2015
This landmark exhibition features rarely loaned works from more than 20 international art museums and private collections worldwide pairing these two legendary artists.
![Detail from Salvador Dalí's "Gala Contemplating the Mediterranean Sea which at Twenty Meters Becomes the Portrait of Abraham Lincoln-Homage to Rothko (Second Version)"](https://thedali.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/1200x500-Exhibit-Marvels.jpg)
Marvels of Illusion
June 14, 2014 – October 12, 2014
Offering a sensational optical and intellectual experience, this exhibit showcases a variety of Dalí paintings, prints and sculpture; a special work from the 16th Century from the School of Arcimboldo; and rich explanatory material.
![Surreal student art, mans face with rorschach overlay](https://thedali.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/1200x500-Exhibit-Student-Surrealism-2014-Statewide.jpg)
Student Exhibit 2014: Change is Strange
January 10, 2014 – September 1, 2014
Initiated in 1992, this annual art exhibit presents work by middle and high school students whom we invite to explore ideas and visions similar to those explored by Salvador Dalí and the surrealists.
!["Dalí's self-portrait modified with Warhol’s vivid color palette."](https://thedali.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/1200x500-Exhibit-Warhol.jpg)
Warhol: Art. Fame. Mortality.
January 18, 2014 – June 1, 2014
Featuring over 100 works, this exhibit explores how Andy Warhol learned from Dali’s public visibility and was equally attuned to the images derived from mass culture.