Showing posts with label barcelona. Show all posts
Showing posts with label barcelona. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 June 2018

Tuesday 5th June: Barcelona Adventures, Part 3








Going to Barcelona with an architect meant that we had some great insider guidance on what to see, like the 
Mies van der Rohe’s modernist Pavilion. In addition to the many Gaudi buildings dotted around, we also made a trip to the magnificent Fundació Joan Miró.  I was so pleased that I had been to the Miro musuem in Mallorca last year so I had some background to really appreciate another magical purpose-built space for his work by his friend Josep Lluís Sert.  In addition to Miro's own work are galleries for contemporary art exhibitions, including this light installation which transformed the white interior just like the stained-glass of the Sagrada Família.  In just a couple of days being tourists we had experienced so many beautiful sights and I feel incredibly lucky to have had the chance to do so.  If like me, you still have Barcelona on your bucket list, book it now!!!

See my archive Miro post here.

Tuesday 5th June: Barcelona Adventures, Part 2















The best moment of the Marathon was turning a corner and being confronted with Gaudi's cathedral, the "Basílica i Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Família".  It was the most cosmic vision and gave me a real whooosh of spine-tingling energy to spur me on.  That's going to be a monumental memory forever.
The following day we walked down stairs backwards and waded in the John Wayne style walk (from the aftermath of running 26 miles) our way back to the Sagrada Familia to see inside.  It was a million times more inspiring than I could have even imagined.  The sunlight flooded in thru spectrum stained-glass windows and lit the humongous cavernous cathedral in a hazy ripply rainbow.  It was unbelievable how saturated and intense the colour was.  To say it was emotional would be an understatement.  I always find religious buildings trigger an unexpected flow of untapped feelings but this really struck a chord............. especially the chrome organ pipes which reflected the colours in an optical illusion as if they were iridescent. 
The whole story was explained in an exhibition in the catacombs which went into every detail of how nature had been the reference point for each point of precision in the engineering.  The twisted towers were built extruded in this cough-candy shape in the way that stems shoot up to the sun in a spiral so each layer of leaves get maximum sunlight.  All these factors just blew my mind.  I had always imagined that Gaudi was Gothic but not at all.  So many elements were graphic and geometrical, based on the science in fractals and crystals.  The very top of a spire is even a dodecahedron which is my favourite polyhedra of all time!!!

Here are my interior shots and snaps from the exhibition showing the models explaining the build.  I couldn't get an exterior shot of the whole thing properly because its just too vast!

Tuesday 5th June: Barcelona Adventures, Part 1











My first ever trip to Barcelona was incredible.  I can't believe that I had not yet been to the colourful capital so when the idea of running the marathon came up, I jumped at the chance.  When you travel to a city specifically for a race you know there is a guarantee that you'll get to see most of the sights in one go!  It was an epically beautiful course through the contrasting architecture of the city and out to the coast, along the blowy beach.  Here are snaps from some of the culture and cuisine we came across on our days off, including the recovery vegan feast at Flax and Kale.

See my race report over on my fitness blog Running Rainbow.