Monday, July 16, 2012

Prague Scenes

Our next stop was Prague. Rebecca and Jeremy had rented a 3 bedroom apartment in the "new" town (1358), a couple blocks from the "dancing building" (known to some as "Fred and Ginger") and the river. All five of us stayed there several days, with the camper stored very conveniently at our old campground, Camping Drusus, west of Prague. We cooked some in, ate some out, and took in a variety of sights all over the great city.

I posted extensively from Prague in 2010. The old city is a very beautiful place, especially if you like Art Nouveau, and so I was tempted to go out and see and photograph everything all over again. In part, I did. But I won't post it all over again, hoping mostly to confine myself to a few new things Vicki and I did. For more pix, see my posts from late August, 2010.
Fred and Ginger


















Rebecca's and Jeremy's apartment building
on Dittrichova street



















Not Art Nouveau: some nice Social Realism just down the
street















Just a block away, at a church, a shrine to the Czech and
Slovak partisans who parachuted back in to then
Czechoslovakia in 1942 and assassinated Reinhard Heydrich,
Nazi governor of Czechoslovakia and thought by some to be
Hitler's heir; the partisans and their protectors, including a
bishop, as I recall, were all killed; and the village of Lidice
was razed in reprisal, all its male inhabitants executed and its
women and children sent to death camps; Heydrich was chief
architect of much of what was most evil about Nazism...





















The commemorative plaque; we were there just a day or
two after the June 18th observance















The bar across the street; another way of remembering...














Sunday afternoon on the Charles River














A peek into the old Jewish cemetery in the Josefov














The great Czech restaurant up by the castle, U Labuti,
where we all had dinner one night















Rebecca, Jeremy, and Penelope, on the castle
grounds



















Up in Hradcany castle, the Golden Lane, which was closed
when Vicki and I were there in 2010















Tower by the Municipal House (next post)


















View of St. Vitus' Church, from the apartment on
Dittrichova















Just one of the great old buildings (I can't help myself!)

Return to Dresden

We visited Dresden in 2010 (see many posts August, 2010) and were sufficiently impressed to suggest that Rebecca and Jeremy make it part of their tour. We were all there two days.
At the stellplatz, the owner spotted Penelope and presented her with a dump
truck to pull around the yard















Vicki visited the Green Vaults with Rebecca and Jeremy while I watched
Penelope; next day, we all got out and I took some pix of Dresden en route to
the Gemaldegalerie; here, the Semperoper, that is, the Dresden opera,
designed by Gottfried Semper

















August the Strong

Rebecca, Jeremy, and Penelope before the Dresden cathedral












The Elbe, not nearly as high as in 2010
Rafael's Sistine Madonna was its own special exhibition at
the Gemaldegalerie this summer





Berlin: Out-takes

Looking for some Impressionist painting
at the Altesmuseum, we came upon this 
portrait of Wagner...by Lembach?




















And a not quite as famous bust of Wagner


















Outside, in the former Soviet zone, some
really nice Social Realism



















Berlin cathedral on a beautiful Sunday afternoon














"Never, ever, appear before me with glad tidings when I'm
on the crapper!"















Capitalism


















The 2012 Euro fussball contest continued; Germany made
it into the final four; fussball fans here are no less crazy than
their counterparts in the US
















My favorite eating establishment in Berlin...


















Marian's Imbiss, Tegel; I could eat currywurst und frites
und bier
3 or 4 times a week; and did















Monday morning Rebecca, Jeremy, and Penelope arrived,
and, after the usual luggage mishap (resolved), we drove
them to their hotel, the Westin Grand Berlin (right on Unter
den Linden
); I couldn't resist driving right up to the front,
horrifying the bell-persons...

















And returned to Wohnmobil Berlin, now with Penelope, her
clothes, food, toys, books, and play-pen/crib; she was a
tired baby, but seemed happy to see us

Berlin: Neuesmuseum, Egypt

More from the Neuesmuseum, Museum Island, Berlin...
Original ceiling decor as one enters the Egyptian section; in the restoration,
much of this was kept; more later














Many beautiful pieces like this















The so-called Berlin Green Man


















Whole walls (apparently the pyramids were too large for the archaeologists'
suitcases)














Detail















One of many old frescoes that adorn and lend atmosphere
to the Egyptian section



















Ditto














Ditto again


















Ancient Egyptian menage a trois?














Pride of the place: its Nephrititi

Berlin: Neuesmuseum, Troy

Later that day we took in some more of the museums on Museum Island, principally the Neuesmuseum. The Neuesmuseum was closed in 2009--and had been since WWII--but recently re-opened after a long but beautiful restoration. We visited mostly the Schliemann/Troy collection (see http://roadeveron.blogspot.de/2010/11/troy.html) and the Egyptian collection (next post).
Gold from Troy VI-VII


















"Priam's Gold"  Hmmm...so the "Priam's Gold" we saw in
Athens was fake?



















As seen on Schliemann's wife (or not)


















More loot from Troy


















Ditto


















In the larger classical section, the usual busts of famous
persons, including personal favorite Socrates



















More cases and cases of famous artifacts














Plaster cast of one of Ghiberti's doors at the Florence
baptistry

Berlin: Gemaldegalerie

We visited the Gemaldegalerie in 2009 and were impressed, though not overwhelmed. At that point we hadn't seen a great number of European museums and certainly hadn't read or seen much European art history. This time I was more impressed. I'm posting just a few favorites and others, probably omitting many more famous works. Despite plundering and looting by the Russians, it is very much a fine museum and world class as far as I can imagine.   
Jan van Eyck, The Madonna in the Church,
1440; incredible church depiction for that
time; PS[2023]...of course anything by van Eyck
is incredible














Lucas Cranach, Fountain of Youth, 1546














Cranach, Altar with Last Judgment (said to be a copy of
a lost Bosch), 1524







Peter Bruegel the Elder, Netherlandish Proverbs, 1559














Rembrandt's Moses and 10 Commandments









Jan Steen, As the Old Sing, So Do the Young (um, my
translation), 1663














Vermeer, The Wine Glass, 1662









Caravaggio?


















Masaccio, roundel, late 1420s















Botticelli, Profile of a Young Woman, 1465


















Botticelli, Maria mit Kind, 1477 (looks like a sad Venus mit
Kind to me)















Botticelli, Venus, no date, the great Birth of
Venus
pose