This morning we were up early because we had to meet our
driver Daniel and guide Montse (short for Montserrat) at 9AM. On today’s agenda were a trip north,
nearly to the French border to Besalú and Figueres.
Besalú is a charming and peaceful medieval town at the
confluence of the Riu Fluvia and the
Riera Capellades. The
origin of the town is its castle
which is documented to have been there at least since the 10th
century. At one time Besalú was
the capital of an independent county but it lost its importance after one of
the counts died leaving no successor.
The town played a part in the Catholic reconquest of the Iberian
Peninsula after the Moors had pushed across the Pyrenees into France all the
way to Poitiers. Besalú became one
of the fortresses guarding the path across the mountains.
The town is most famous for its Jewish miqwah which was
discovered unexpectedly in 1964. A
miqwah (or mikwah) was a ritual cleansing pool usually located below ground
level with no piping or channeling
so it could be filled with water from a fountain or river. This one is the only building of its
kind found in Spain and the third largest of the ten that have been conserved
in Europe. It’s constructed in
hewn stone in the Romanesque style and is located below what documents dating
to 1264 show was once a synagogue.
There was evidently a thriving Jewish community in the town under the
protection of the king whose personal physician was a Jewish doctor.
Also worth seeing is the Church of Sant Vicenç. Records show the church in existence as
early as 977. It too is a
Romanesque construction with certain elements showing a transition to Gothic
architecture. The entrance to the
town is via a spectacular old bridge.
The bridge has seven arches and has a dogleg layout because the support
pillars for the arches are sited on natural rocks in the riverbed. It’s 105 meters long and has a sentry
tower about midway. The bridge has
been rebuilt several times, most recently after being dynamited during the
Spanish Civil Was. When it was
rebuilt it was done under the supervision of an Architectural Board so that it
would be true to style.
Our next stop was the city of Figueres, birthplace of
Salvador Dalí and home of the Dalí
Theatre Museum. Dalí is the famous Spanish surrealist painter born in
1904. The museum is located in the
former Municipal Theatre of Figueres.
The building was all but destroyed in the Spanish Civil War. Dalí decided he wanted to have his
museum on that site because as he said he was 1) a very theatrical painter, 2)
it is across the street from the church where he was baptized and 3) because
his first exhibition was In the lobby of the theatre before its
destruction. He supervised the
construction personally. The
exterior of the building is very fanciful. It’s pink with lots of gold painted loaves of bread
plastered to the walls. Along the
roofline are golden statues which reminded me of Oscars.
Inside the museum is just as unusual. A lot of Dalí’s art has many layers of
meanings. There were a number of
paintings in which one could see different things when looked at with the naked
eye or through the viewfinder of a camera. One of the stranger ones was a painting he did by flogging
an octopus on a canvas. Some of
the painting is octopus ink, some of it paint. One can see Dalí’s foot prints are on there. Visible through the camera is a
face. Across the central courtyard
is another painting which looks like a woman but when seen through the camera
there is a portrait of Abraham Lincoln.
Very strange! Many of
the paintings are of Dalí’s wife Gala.
I have always thought of Dalí as a surrealist but two of the most
beautiful paintings in the collection at the museum are two realist paintings,
one of Gala and one of a basket with a loaf of bread. They are incredible!
They could have been photographs; they are so wonderfully done. Years ago I volunteered at an
elementary school and taught kids about some of the great masters. One of their favorites always seemed to
be Dalí and especially his masterpiece “The Persistence of Memory.” That one is
in New York, but an earlier study is in the museum in Figueres and it was
interesting to see and think about the evolution that became perhaps his most
famous work.
The multi-layered painting made using an octopus |
After a great day we went back to Barcelona. Daniel was a great driver and Montse was
a fantastic guide! As we were
returning to our hotel she told us that around the corner was a good
restaurant. We decided to give it
a try so we dined at Bar Lobo, literally around the corner and in the same building as our hotel. We sat at a table outside in a little
square and watched the world go by.
It was a wonderful evening.
Thank you for the recommendation, Montse!
Well, tomorrow we begin our voyage on the Quest. More later.
3 comments:
Interesting, sounds like an excellent day. Dali is so famous that he can seem (at least to me) to be himself 'abstract'--in that he's more like a standard by which to judge other modern art than an actual artist himself. Hearing about the man and his work in such a concrete way is a welcome check to such thinking.
Loving your blog,looking forward to hearing more about your trip!
Dobie
Ann, this makes me want to see this. I didn't know it was there, 😁
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