Tuesday, April 23, 2013

El Kit: Matador De Peces Moro

Many of the Alhambra's fetid water features are populated
by Moorish goldfish; the situation could get out of hand in
such an environment but
















For the efforts of El Kit, Slayer of Moorish Fish














Here El Kit slyly looks away, feigning indifference














Here El Kit is in attack position as the unsuspecting Moor
approaches















At the very moment of attack...




































The next several pix have been suppressed for their violent goriness...

But here El Kit is back at work, feigning indifference; ad
majorem gloriam Dei!















Alhambra, 2013, Part The Second

Now in the Nasrid Palace...
Vicki really loves the intricate carving, the variety of
geometrical patterns, the beautiful Islamic script














Thus














And thus above














I really like it too, for the first 6-8 minutes; then I begin
looking around for other things to look at and photograph;
in her case, I think it's the pain pills kicking in...














Courtyard of the Twelve Lions (Zodiac stuff); which we did
not fully enjoy before because














In January, 2010, the lions were away, at their winter home
grounds near Sarasota, Fla.














Intricate carving














More ceiling adornment














Tiles in the Chamber of the Two Sisters (or possibly the
Three Stooges or the Twelve Tribes)














Palace roofing














View of the gypsy section of Granada from Washington
Irving's window; he stayed in 1829, the one good result of
his idiotically fanciful Tales of the Alhambra was renewed
Spanish interest in the place and ultimately its rebuilding














Nice fountain, nice lighting














Another of the many water features

Alhambra, 2013, Part The First

From Toledo we drove down La Mancha, high and dry country, toward Granada, the plains giving way to more hilly and then mountainous features. Olive groves everywhere, but nothing to compare with Greece's Sea of Olives near Mt. Parnassus. Anyhow, we reached Granada in fine order and found our old friend Camping Reina Isabella, rather fuller than at our last visit. Our 2nd night there, there were only 4 vacant spaces left. Mostly northern Europeans heading back home, we surmise.

The Alhambra is Vicki's favorite Moorish spot. We visited in January of 2010, and I recall posting several items. I'll do fewer this time, but allowing for the fact that April is a wonderful time to visit this world class site; everything is in bloom. January was not.

As everyone knows, the Alhambra is divided into four distinct areas: Adventure Land, Frontier Land, Tomorow Land...wait, no. That's the old fortress, the Alcazar, the Nazrid Palace (the truly Moorish part), Charles V's Palace, and the Generalife, which is the garden/summer palace and not an insurance company.

We begin with the old fortress and views from it.
Old fortress; as I said, everything is in bloom














View from the fortress; newer Granada














Older Granada














Sierra Nevada, at the base of which Granada sits














Wisteria on the Alcazar


















From the Alcazar, looking back to the Nasrid (ancient kings
of  men, neither living nor dead; wait, no, that's the Nazgul)
and Charles V's palace















You just know the builder of this place, Charles V, is going
to to go on and build something really cheery, like the
Escorial
















Inside the unfinished Palace


















Everything in bloom

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Toledo, 2013

After two nights in Madrid we broke camp at Camping Osuna and drove the 40 miles or so to Toledo and its free parking aire by the bus station. This is a huge lot. There were 15 other RVs there our first night. Plus Wifi Toledo is there and also free.

We did Toledo in a day, aided by having spent a day in the city in 2010. First was the great Santa Cruz museum, much enlarged from our earlier visit. Then the Zocodover and on to the Cathedral. The latter now charges 8 euros admission, and thus we demurred. I'd pay 10 euros tops for the Pearly Gates themselves. We saw the cathedral in 2010, and it's not that great, except for the El Grecos that are everywhere and the hilarious hole in the roof to let light in over the altar. And the damned woman with the flaming crotch, but that's another matter entirely. See my posts from 2010. We also thought we'd revisit the Burial of Count Orgasm, but we misunderstood the pricing structure and demurred there too. Been there, done that anyway. So we moved on to the Jewish quarter, the synagogue there—nicely done—and the El Greco museum,which is as much about life in 16th-17th century Toledo as about El Greco. Then we did the Visigoth museum in another church—very much worth doing I think, mostly for the extant 13th century paintings on the walls—and then the recently uncovered Roman Baths, the Baths of Hercules, also nearly interesting. After all this, we wandered the older city, well off the beaten track, eventually getting ourselves back down to the aire after a long day.
The aire in Toledo, just a short walk up to the city (we took
the bus)















The Alcazar at night, from our camper














Me and Cervantes just down from the
Zocodover; apparently remembering the
Naval Battle of Lepanto, he wanted to wear
my captain's cap





















The Santa Cruz, a great little city museum


















In its extensive tile collection














A giant 14th century tapestry of the Zodiac














El Greco's two Johns; the museum has
perhaps a dozen El Grecos and El Greco
Studio works




















Street scene and cathedral spire


















Cathedral altar view, as far as mendicants can go














We also skipped the Burial of Count Orgaz


















And found our way to the former Jewish Quarter















In the synagogue; nice museum adjoining















In the Sillon de Circuncision














We move now to the El Greco Museum, which, as I said, is
as much about life in Baroque Spain (the Renaissance never
got here) as about El Greco; actually quite nicely done
















Bathroom signage the Greek might have liked; I did














St. James the Major (Santiago...)


















El Greco's very famous map of Toledo














Grave goods in the Visigothic museum














Far more interesting frescoes in the old church that houses
the museum















A rudimentary arch in Hercules' Baths














And, with a short escalator ride and hike down, we are
back at the aire






El Prado

So we did the Prado again. Eight hours. Eight hours of glory. We have learned how to do these half dozen of the greatest museums in the world. You fortify yourselves, intellectually, aesthetically, and nutrionally, and then you go, seeking out your favorites, anticipating where the greatest crowds will be and avoiding them, taking breaks, taking sustenance, returning once more unto the breach, seeking ever more. Leaving when you're done and can do no more. Then reveling in the experience, registering what new you have learned, and memorializing it. So it was that day.

We paid our admission and picked up our audioguides and headed immediately for 56A or was it 56B and Bosch's Garden of Delights. It's not even remotely Spanish—it was among the Flemish masterpieces looted by the Spanish in their Netherlands wars of the 16th and 17th centuries--but it is always the biggest draw in this museum. Items in the gift shoppes confirm this: Vicki almost bought a Jim Thompson pashmina of the Heaven panel...would really have Thai'd things together. A museum that is home to Titian and Velasquez and El Greco and Ribera and Murillo and Goya and more! And we had it to yourselves for half an hour, and then more Bosch, and then a big Elder Brueghel that was discovered and added only in 2012. We went to the cafe for sustenance and a break, and then headed back for the tour proper, roughly chronological, mostly painting, more masterpieces than you'd see in a whole course on Western European art. (The same can be said of those other half dozen greatest museums). Dozens of Rubens; Tintorettos, scores of Titians; and then the Spanish painters. Yes, there's Las Meninas. He used only half the giant canvas! And the 3rd of May, and Saturn. And somehow back there a Botticelli trio on a story from Boccaccio, a type of Botticelli we have not seen before.

When we visited in 2010, there was a strict no fotos policy and the staff to enforce it. I didn't dare. In 2013, there seem fewer staff, many covering two rooms, but again I didn't dare. Nor did anyone else. Much to my surprise, however, the Prado now allows you to grab pix off its website—they didn't do this is 2010—so I'll grab and post just a few below to convey our interests and delights. It's a great, great museum. We'll be back!

PS Caravaggio gets very high billing at the Prado currently; on the basis solely of his early David and Goliath (starring someone else as Goliath); such is the attraction currently of Caravaggio.

PPS "Pedro Pablo Rubens" still cracks me up!
Hieronymous Bosch's Garden of Earthly Delights











3rd panel of the Botticelli wedding allegory from Boccaccio












El Greco, St. Andrew and Someone Else


















Velasquez, Las Meninas


















Goya's 3rd of May