Showing posts with label Artists: Gaudí. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artists: Gaudí. Show all posts

Monday, May 31, 2010

Still amazed at the Sagrada Familia Church


I've been entering the Sagrada Familia Church a few times a week these last 10 years, and still nowadays it continues amazing me: every new detail, every new element completed, every change...

This week I really felt there like the very first time. Since next November the Pope of Rome will be consacrated the interior of the Church, the workers are hurrying up to have the naves ready for the visit. This week they have finished retiring the scaffolding they used to build the central skylight over the altar. Seeing that space finally cleared really touched me. The view of the golden rays of the vault, and the elegance of the four red porphyr columns just left me without words.

I'm excited about the many more surprises coming up along the summer, as more and more of the inside will be completed. I have no words to express the way I feel about it.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

New Sagrada Familia channel in Youtube!

Hi!

And first of all, happy new year! Sorry I haven't written in a while... lots of ideas, little time!

Well today I wanted to share with you that the Sagrada Familia Church has created an official Youtube channel where they post videos of the evolution of the works as well as the many cultural activities organized in the site.

Check it out here!

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

News at the Sagrada Familia!!!!


The other day, while on a tour, I crossed Jordi Faulí, one of the main architects in the Sagrada Familia, and he confirmed me they plan to have the interior of the church ready by July 2010. Well, they are really working to fullfill their promise, as today when I entered the naves area I looked up and... they had started removing some of the scaffolding and platforms that hid the new vaults at the transcept, at the side of the Nativity Façade. Here is my pic!

The vaults I'm talking about are those made of flat brick (orange color) and venitian glass (gold and green touches). To me, that I'm going there almost every day, it is so exciting to see how the building grows!

Monday, March 16, 2009

Specialised Gaudí Tours, and a customized music tour

Last week I spent three days with Mr. Shapero discovering in depth the works of Antoni Gaudí.
On our first day we did the Gaudí masterpieces: his appartment buildings Casa Batlló and Casa Milà in the morning, and the fascinating Sagrada Familia unfinished church in the afternoon.

The next day we went out of town to visit the Colònia Güell Crypt in Santa Coloma de Cervelló, a little known jewel where Gaudí tried the techniques that he'll use later on in the Sagrada Familia. We were accompanied by the architect Eva Palacios, who's got a big background on Gaudí studies and added up to my explanations with her technical input. Then after a nice lunch by the water Mr. Shapero and me went to the Park Güell.

We devoted our last morning to Gaudí's minor works. We started with his very first building, the Casa Vicenç, then took a taxi towards the Güell Pavilions, and on the way saw the Teresianes School and the gate of the Miralles real-state. After the Pavilions, we checked out a fountain and a pergola he built nearby, in what now is the garden of the Pedralbes Palace (but was formerly part of Güell's real-state). After that we returned to the city center and saw the Casa Calvet, then decided to walk accross the Old Town to the Güell Palace (I took the opportunity to show him the Palau de la Música Catalana by Domènech i Muntaner, an architect contemporary to Gaudí, the Quatre Gats cafè where Picasso used to hang out and meet other bohemian artists, and the streetlamps a very young Gaudí designed for the Plaça Reial).

After visiting the basement of the Güell Palace (the rest of the building is currently being restored, more info in a previous article I wrote for this blog), we had a fun tapas lunch at the Boqueria market.

In the afternoon my client was interested in buying some music for his art projects, so I took him to a music store and assisted him finding CD's that could be of his interest, and got someone of the Spanish and Catalan music section to give us more ideas (I was here acting as a translator for Mr. Shapero). I also helped him getting some books specialised in the Gaudí works, and took him to the Post Office were all his shopping was sent home by airmail.

After all this we still had some time left, and he said he'd love to hear some street-musicians. So I took him back to the Gothic Quarter, were I guided him around the spots where I know it's easy to find them. We had a nice time listening to their music and walking around the medieval alleys and squares. I loved doing that! It was my first ever "street-musician hunting" tour!

Friday, January 16, 2009

Video about the present and future of the Sagrada Familia Church

This wonderful Church has been under construction since 1882, and it became Gaudí's masterpiece and passion after he joined the project in 1883 and totally transformed the original plan.

Now the building in progress is visited by over 2 milion people every year, that wander around the site admiring what has already been built as well as the magnificent job of the workers, specialists and artists that can be seen working there from Monday to Friday.

You'll enjoy this video that combines images of the present works with computer images of what it'll look like in the future. My favorite part: the stainglass windows.
Don't miss it!

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Defending Gaudí

Last Sunday one of our most popular local newspapers, El Periódico de Catalunya, published a letter I sent defending Gaudí and the continuation of the construction works of the Sagrada Familia.

You can read it in Spanish here.