Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Gala and Salvador Dali Teatro and Museu

Figueres is home to the main Dali museum. It had been the town's theatre, but was damaged in the civil war. Dali convinced the town (his home town) that if they gave him the theatre, let him have his way with it (!), he'd put them on the map. The rest is history. We spent several hours...the place is a complete and total hoot, especially if you have been touring Europe recently and have learned a little art history. For me, it was just the right combination of art, intellect, and bad boy.

So you're walking along this street in
downtown Figueres, apartment and office
buildings on all sides, you turn a corner,
and then this--the Dali Teatro--pops out at
you














Main tower and dome, and eggs, and statues...








Closer up








Yes, they are loaves of bread...a running gag, it turned out









In the courtyard, before you even go in to
the museum, the craziness begins...












Statue in the courtyard











Another

































































Adios, Barcelona

Our campsite in Barcelona, the Forum Park 'n Ride; not
cheap, not quiet, but close-in and safe












Misericord on the Barcelona Metro, seriously











We both had read Zafon's Shadow of the
Wind recently (I loved it); if I were spending
more time here, I'd read more of his work
and then use this handy guide to the town














We left Barcelona in the afternoon and got as far as Figueres,
staying at a supermercado that permits RVs; happy (if dead)
fish at the supermercado









Alcoholic cool aid; a liter for a euro; an important source of
vitamin C

Monday, February 8, 2010

Sagrada Familia

Friday morning we took the tram/Metro back
into the old city for a long look at the
Sagrada Familia, the Gaudi church that has
been under construction since 1882; no one
knows when it will be finished, but already
it is one of the great religious buildings, and,
when finished, it certainly will eclipse most
of the rest (Vicki calls it the Sangria Family);
the towers, 12 of them altogether, are about
100m tall


















A glimpse of what the stained glass will
look like











Cranes everywhere











Jesus of the bridge...ascending (interestingly,
Gaudi's angels have no wings; he maintained
that the wings conventionally ascribed to
them could not have supported flight (no
dorsal guiding feathers?))












Love the fruit and vegetable look on the
spires











Ditto











As I said, they have no problem with rebar here







And still a long way to go...

Picasso Museum

The Barcelona Cathedral, which we skipped;
it's hardly the main church in town












Alley near the Picasso Museum











The Picasso Museum has a no-pix policy; Vicki snapped
this in protest; I didn't really think anything was worth
photographing







Old city walls and portal, part Roman













































Much of Picasso's formative years were in or near Barcelona, and the Picasso Museum has a great deal of his earliest work. Even his adolecent paintings are striking for their emotion and skill. He was a genuine prodigy and paid his dues in mastering conventional techniques. The museum has holdings up through the Blue period, plus his 1957 Las Meninas (parody? tribute?) but not a lot more. Not our most impressive museum, but then Picasso is not exactly our favorite artist.

Palace of Catalan Music

Vicki had seen photos on postcards of the Palau de Musica
de la Catalan and we resolved to see it--only via tour and
no pix--the next day; of all Barcelona's sights, it was the
most impressive, not a Gaudi piece, although the same
vintage and very Modernista; interior (off the web);
surprisingly, the place seats more than 2,000; it feels far
more intimate











Incredible inverted ceiling dome








Even the coffee shoppe wasn't bad looking








Interior









Exterior view, facade; the building is so
hemmed-in, you can't see much of it from the
outside













More exterior











Plus, they treat Wagner very well

Sagrada Familia By Night

The night was young, it wasn't that far away
(we thought), so we bussed and Metro'd and
walked over to the Sagrada Familia, the
Gaudi church, still under construction (begun
in 1882), all lit up; it too is incredible; they
are not building this church the old-fashioned
way; Gaudi was a 4th generartion metal
worker and saw nothing wrong with using
rebar and concrete


















Anyhow, work continues through the night











Note tree and doves above the doors











All-day and -night tourism requires massive
infusions of hot choclate and churros

Park Guell

Gaudi also designed a residential neighborhood and park. The neighborhood thing flopped--too few buyers/investors--and so was scrapped, but the city later acquired the property as a park, the Park Guell (his patron), another Gaudi monument.

Barcelona, from the summit of Park Guell









Approaching the park terrace










Gaudi park benches











Vicki on one of the benches

Detail

More of the park

Grill work at the entrance

In the market area; the columns only look
perpendicular

Guardian reptile

From the entrance to the terrace

La Pedrera

La Pedrera is an apartment building by Gaudi, 4 blocks or so from the Block of Discord (all this is in the Example, the Extension, the new (c. 1880) addition that adjoins the old city from the Plaza de Catalan). It is part Gaudi museum and showplace but is also still occupied by a few (very wealthy) residents and a few offices.  It was just as incredible inside as outside.

La Pedrera, frontal view









Looking up from the entry











In the foyer







There is a furnished apartment on the 5th floor, part of the
museum, all done up in Modernista, that is, art nouveau,
incredibly beautiful stuff













Roof ornamentation











Closer up











More roof ornmentation; as we'll see, much
of his work involves broken tile--they can
be set in curves that unbroken tiles cannot













Gaudi chimneys











From the roof, a mile or so away, the
Sagrada Familia, Gaudi's church, which
we'll see a lot more of...













And the Torre Agbar, which is 20th century,
not Gaudi, but fits Barcelona just as well












Interior structural support for the roof











Pedrera by night