Monday, May 1, 2023

Barcelona Out-Takes, 2

Never ever buy blankets from strangers...

Rare dorsal view of Casa Battlo

Rare frontal view of our apartment building; 
our apartment was the third up on the left corner

Peering into a jewelry artisan's studio in Bari Gotik

Done, sort of

Defective Medieval downspout; corrected via
Home Depot

Einstein flying low

Caganers again; when we first visited Spain, the
only caganers we saw were in nativity scenes...
now it's an industry, with few celebrities of any sort
escaping for long

A really big store, part of a chain...most tourist memories of Barcelona,
I speculate, now will be of the Sagrada Familia and of caganers










More extreme niche marketing...the mosquito
repellant store

Dagger-head lady making obscene gesture

Wandering tongue drummer?

According to lemon juice producers, it's supposed
to be 50/50

Another defective downspout...

Interesting government pronouncement

Ugliest building in Barcelona



Day Of Books And Roses: St. George's Day In Barcelona

Usually our last day wherever is pretty quiet, spent packing, cleaning, checking arrangements, getting ready for the next adventure. Not so Barcelona: it was city patron saint St. George's Day, celebrating romance, and also, traditionally, World Book Day, celebrating books. St. George really doesn't get much attention, and it's not really a holiday, but the city's various centers--Las Ramblas, St. Jaume's, the Passeig Gracia, etc.--all are crammed with book stalls and other stalls selling roses. The tradition is that boys give girls a rose, and girls give boys a book. Of course, nowadays, anything goes,* but mostly you see books and roses. Everywhere. The Passeig Gracia was nearly a mile of books and roses, and thousands upon thousands of people, all the way from Placa Catalunya to Avenuda Diagonal, Las Ramblas de la Catalunyas and all the side streets similarly crammed. Wheeled conveyances were mostly banned from the city center, and for much of the way, it was elbow-to-elbow, especially on Gracia, a very wide boulevard indeed. Some of our best memories of such events--the Feria in Seville, the Basque Week and its fireworks competition extravaganza in San Sebastian--have occurred in Spain, and St. George's Day in Barcelona will now join that list. 




Roses for sale near our apartment at Arc de Triomf; Catalan
colors, identity, and, yes, separatism, are still going strong...

The book tents, mostly publishers but some bookstores, go on for
block and blocks and blocks

Author signings

Side street

Other side of two long columns of stalls

Hundreds of thousands of print books; makes you feel almost
guilty owning a Kindle or reading on your phone

Readings and interviews

Approaching the Block of Discord


Another side street

Our only disappointment...we'd (foolishly) hoped to have lunch at
Cervesaria Catalana, but found it closed; we tried Casa Flauta, as
recommended, but the wait there was two hours and thirty minutes;
we settled for a pretty good Naples-style pizza on another side street

And the party goes on

Casa Mila, all decked out


But the biggest star was Casa Battlo

As dense a crowd as I've seen


We took refuge in Casa Amattler; the hot chocolate
fountain there

The Casa Battlo gift shop...where we exited; Vicki
adds that it is one of Barcelona's three great artsy
gift shoppes

And walked home admiring ever more great Modernista
architecture

House of Points















*"...good authors too, who once knew better words, now only use four-letter words, writing prose, anything goes..."

Views From The Palau Nacional

One can walk around the roof of the Palau Nacional, in which the MNAC is located, something that escaped us in 2017. We were too busy doing the great art within. But the views of Barcelona from Mont Juic are worth seeing.

En route from Placa Espanya, the Arena, a former bullfighting ring,
now a shopping center with 100 shops...sic transit, Gloria

From the steps (after many escalators) of the Palau Nacional;
the pigeon wasn't there in 2017


Now on the roof, looking to the sea; the building 
on the left is the Mapfre building, where we had 
our Peking duck dinner (important historical note)

Olympic stadium

Interesting cell tower; actually a sculpture, 
Vicki informs me, of the Hand of God, from one
of the Romanesque frescoes

Central Barcelona

Peering down into the palace arena, where we'd later have lunch

Central dome

More of the great city, including its new major landmark


Largest indoor lunch venue for us ever, so far

Interior of the central dome, by Francesc d'Assis Gali