Friday, August 27, 2010

Prague Miscellany 1

Miscellaneous shots from Prague

Our campground, out on the west side, near
Trebonice; the Stanik family has run the
farm for 300 years, and their campground,
not quite as old, is perhaps the best we have
stayed at in Europe, small, but amply
featured, convenient to the city, and the
most helpful and generous staff we've
encountered


















Hare krishna, with amplifiers and headphones, on the
Charles Bridge







The pissing match statues near the Kafka Museum; one of
the world's more interesting water features; you can control
their actions (some of them) by sending text messages...









The Kafka Museum itself; Kafka stuff is all over Prague













One-way alley with traffic signal











Holy Finger, on the Charles Bridge











Marionette theaters and shoppes are all over
the old town












One popular marionette

Church of St. Nicholas, Mala Strana

We had planned to skip this one--how many Baroque churches do you have to see?--but it was right across the street from a restaurant we liked, and something told me it was worth the (modest) admission fee.
St. Nicholas from street level












Interior; knock-out Counter-Reformation
Baroque to the hilt












Altar













Impressive dome









Nave ceiling











Organ












Interesting pose, Vicki thought











Skewering another Protestant

Hradcany Castle

It's way too large for a photo, built in the Middle Ages, and added on to since.

But first, today's wedding photo shoot shot, in the castle
square (we see one nearly every day)





The Czech crown, etc.; hasn't been used for quite a while
















Interior of St. George's Basilica, a 10th
century chapel on the premises













The basilica itself







View out the state rooms' windows (the usual no pix policy
enforced)








The view: the domes and roof of St. Nicholas', in Mala
Strana, below the castle hill




The Moldau and Charles Bridge below











The City of Spires, it's called









Ditto

St. Vitus' Cathedral

St. Vitus' is in the Hradcany Castle complex, on the west side of the town, on a hill over-looking the Moldau. Parts of the castle go back to the 11th century or earlier. St. Vitus took some 600 years to build, started in the 13th century, finished in the 19th. It is quite large and high, with beautiful windows and scultpure, very much the national cathedral of the Czech Republic.
West facade and towers; flaming Gothic, as
you can see












Interior











Beautiful windows (Mucha's the best, we
thought; see earlier post)












Stained light on the floor










Ceiling; note tracery at top of windows












Tomb of St. Vitus; the original church was
built around it in the 10th century













A royal tomb













Rose window











St. Wenceslas chapel






East side, buttresses, spires and tower

Alfons Mucha

Alfons Mucha is to Prague what Antoni Gaudi is to Barcelona; one sees Mucha's work everywhere. We went to the Mucha Museum and to an exhibit at the Municipal House, and later, to the Slavic Epic in Moravsik Krumlov, in Moravia.

You may never have heard of Mucha, but
you have seen his work and that of many
imitators; the Style Mucha is nearly
synonymous with Art Nouveau...slinky
women, flowers, extravagant ornamentation












Typical












After a few years' struggle in Paris, he took
the arts world by storm--applied/commercial/
graphic arts--in the 1890s as the poster artist
for Sara Bernhardt; after that, nearly
everything bottled or packaged came to have
a Mucha design; champagnes, biscuit tins,
cigar boxes, you name it

















The Mucha window in St. Vitus' Cathedral











Closer up; wildly successful as a commercial artist, he
devoted the second half of his life to nationalism and
"serious" art, painting the 20 massive canvasses of the
Slav Epic--we'll see later--this stained glass window
in St. Vitus', as well as currency, postage stamps, and
other items for the newly created post-WWI Czechslovakia
(the Hapsburgs had ruled Czechslovakia for centuries)

Municipal House

Sights from the beautiful Municipal House and the main square in Stare Mesto.
The Medieval Tower next to the Municipal
House













Smetana Hall, the great concert hall in the Municipal House








Entry oramentation for the Municipal House







One of the several gorgeous restaurants





Another
















Downstairs, the Czech dining room/beer hall, incredible
paneling








Glass-work like this everywhere








Nearby, towers of the Church of Our Lady of Tyn








The massive statue to Jan Hus, in the main square; Hus was
the earliest of Protestant reformers, burnt at the stake after
his capture (by deceit) and refusal to recant











Rathaus tower and the astronomical clock;
the crowd was wowed, but we've seen better...