The City of Barcelona is the symbol of Art and Architectural masterpieces. Between Gaudi, Picasso, Miro, Domenech / Montaner and Berenguer de Montagut (the Salivador Dali museum in a nearby town) and other equally amazing artists, this City has become a mecca of European art and architecture. Gaudi being the most prolific of beautifully designed and constructed buildings, it is mindbogling to see 14th – 20th century buildings all located in one busy City, many of which are located near each other. The Miro museum shown above, which houses a special collection of Joan Miro's art, provided our first entree into art blending with space and architecture.
Since Barcelona hosted the 1992 Olympics, the City has become a major destination point in Europe. Besides being the second most used port in Europe for worldwide crusises in its beautiful and expansive setting on the Mediterrean Sea, the City has enjoyed a reputation for historical architectural design, wonderful food with a very pleasing culture.
The Gaudi masterpiece, the Church of Sagradia Famla is the emblem of the City. I can’t even begin to describe such a design by this architectural genius. We attach a few pictures that barely tell the story of this community he envisioned 100 years ago. Stan is shown inside the cathedral and outside is a recent scuplture that includes Gaudi on the left and a figure that supposedly inspired the "Darth Vader" character when George Lucas visited years ago. One of the pictures shown the spires that represent the 8 of the twelve apostles and the cranes indicate that work on the cathedral is still proceeding -- the guide said that it would be completed sometime between 2028 and 2030.
Then there is Gaudi’s Parc Guell, a fascinating design and monument from a man ahead of this time by at least 100 years using recycled materials, water conservation and techniques and creative design to create environmentally and sustainable communities. Gaudi was originally designing a community for 70 homes, but it was never finished and has been turned into a major park in the city.
The last picture is of a former bull fighting ring now turned into a shopping mall, since bull fighting was voted illegal in Barcelona. Later that evening we returned for the fireworks show at 10 pm marking the end of their major La Merce festival.