Wednesday, January 25, 2017

"Don't Cry For Me, Argentina"

On the list of must-sees in BA is the Recoleta Cementario [sic], foremost among whose many distinguished residents is Evita Peron, the former first lady and subject of much writing and music. The cemetery was just a few blocks from our apartment.
Not the Pere Lachaise in Paris, but still of interest


Typical boulevard

This space available


She loved her Edsel




Rehearsing


Emilio ("Lefty") Sanchez de Guyaba, founder
of the Boy Scouts

The plots all go down two stories

Finally, the Duartes

Evita!


Cheap seats

A girl and her dog

Appropriate plumbing fixture

A librarian, we speculated

Still reverrred

El Atenio Grand Splendid

If you love bookstores, one of the places you have to visit is Buenos Aires' El Atenio Grand Splendid. It is a fine, if not exceptional bookstore, in terms of inventory.  But in term of place, it is "una libraria unica en el mundo," that is, located in a beautifully preserved 19th century theatre.





Kids' books, games, etc.



Cafe


One of many reading rooms




Increible!

Museo Belles Artes

We should have gone to one of BA's museums of Latin American art. That would have entailed knowing something about Latin American Art, however, and, alas, we know very little, and thus would have gained very little in a visit. Next time we will do better. (And we're increasingly thinking, after just a few days, there will be a next time here). In any case, we visited the Museo Belles Artes, which features quite a bit of the European art we have come to know fairly well. It was a rainy Sunday afternoon, and the place was packed.
BA's Museo Belles Artes

Not a Rembrandt self-portrait; looks like his second wife

A Pietro Pablo study (Rubens)

A Cranach!

Another Rubens

A Zuberan; we like pointy hats from the
Inquisition (nobody expects the Spanish
Inquisition!)

Domenikos Theotokopolos; the Greek

Gustave Courbet, Orange Sea

The first of several Goyas


We'll be in Prado in a few months

A The Kiss in marble

More Goya

Another Goya, featuring a papal fly-by

Eugene Boudin, The River at Portrieux

Manet, The Nymph Surprised

I was hoping to make art history by identifying
a lost Fragonard, but it was only a Fantin-Latour

Monet, on the Seine

An early Toulouse-Lautrec

Never, ever miss a Berthe Morisot

Or a pretty Renoir

Or a Gauguin


Interesting place, and a reminder of how young
this city is