15 June 2010

Semana Santa 2010


Semana Santa or 'Holy Week' starts Spain's Spring Break around the time of Pascual or 'Easter'.  Obviously being in 'Catholic Spain', I had some very high expectations.  All week long from the end of March to the beginning of April.  I got a full week off of work which was nice as I was in need a descanso.  I had just come back from Vigo the weekend prior and was planning another trip to Salamanca in the week that followed, so I had a completely empty agenda for this week which was just what the doctor ordered.
I borrowed one of my colleague's Madrid tour books and started to scan through it one day.  I was amazed about how many things in Madrid I had never been to or even knew existed.  So I decided to utilize this time to check out what secrets were hiding in this massive city. 

I must admit that I slept in almost every day and put no urgency to accomplish much of anything.  I enduldged myself with long dinners and copias amounts of drink during this week with some of my friends.  However, I did get around to seeing some pretty awesome things.

One day, Craig, Irene, my amazing Italian roommate and I went for a long stroll around Parque Oeste and the Royal Palace.
Another day was spent at the Soralla Museum only minutes from where I live.
Yet another day was spent in the city that will forever have my heart... TOLEDO!
And the rest were spent cleaning, shopping and general walk-abouts in the centro.

  Me (left) and My Roommate Irene (right)

What I want this blog to be mostly about it the festivities revolving around Semana Santa in Madrid.

I really like this BLOG's review of Semana Santa in Spain... so check it out if you want more info!

One of my goals was to sit in on a Catholic mass in one of Madrid's hundreds of iglesias.  I got that opportunity during my stroll with Craig and Irene.  I intended on going to a small church near my apartment but when we were passing the Cathedral near the Royal Palace and I saw that there was a service going on at that moment, I thought... what the hell! (Sorry for the blasphemy!)

It was also my first time inside the Cathedral here in Madrid so it was quite the experience for me.  We stayed about 20 minutes as the crowds of people left no where to sit.  But I was really moved by the Latin service and choir.  I'm not a religious person by any means but it's still one of those cultural experiences that really have an impact on a person. 

The one event during Semana Santa I knew I couldn't miss was
'La Procession de Silencio'
view from inside the parade heading towards PUERTA DE SOL

It starts near Atocha and continues down towards Sol wraps around and continues back.  It would seem like any normal religion based- Easter parade with exception to some crazy outfits and suprising offerings of penance. Well, I'll let you see for yourself...
Hopefully, I don't have to explain that the outfits have absolutely NOTHING to do with the KKK!
The people are called Nazarenos; they wear these costumes as a way to demonstrate their penatence to heaven.  Every major city in Spain has a different group of Nazarenos that each have their own colored costumes and different ways to distinguish themselves from one another.  It is considered a great honor throughout Spain to become a Nazareno.




The second picture demonstates common people usually members of that group's particular church who want to ask for foregiveness for their sins through this walk of 'disgrace'.  They walk barefoot shackled with chains; the more chains, the more forgiveness you're asking for.  Nowadays, it is a more symbolic tradition. 


Well here are some more photos of the parade to help you get an idea of what a spectacle it was! Enjoy :)






13 June 2010

El Capricho

Background:
Summary found: HERE!!!!

“Though very much unknown and out of the way, the garden of El Capricho (literally, a whim) is one of the most beautiful and attractive parks in the city.”

The 14-hectare garden, located in the area of Barajas district, dates back to 1784 when the Duke of Osuna, from one of the most illustrious and powerful of the city’s families, acquired the land for the specific purpose of giving expression to the family’s visionary and artistic values as well as to give the family a place to escape city life. The prime mover was the Duchess Lady María Josefa de la Soledad Alonso Pimentel. Thought to be among the most intelligent women of her time, and a patron to many artists, bull-fighters and intellectuals, she designed the garden bearing in mind a sort of artistic-nature retreat for the more illustrious figures of her day and which the most prestigious gardeners, artists and scene designers contributed in designing.

During the Civil War change came about, since what was once considered a place for leisure and strolling, became the Staff Headquarters of the Central Army. To this day, the garden shows the structural accommodations for a line of defense bunkers. At the end of the war, the property passed through a number of different hands, until it was bought by the Town Hall in 1974, followed by renovation works carried out several years later. After several periods of inactivity, this work as finally taken up again in 1999, and went on to win a Europa Nostra award in 2001.

Between Gardens

On the way to the estate, one passes a circular plaza which used to be the site of a bull-fighting ring and which later became the Paseo de los Duelistas, with two sculptures representing the distance separating two people about to engage in a duel unto death. A little further is the Plaza de los Emperadores, showing the busts of two Roman emperors along with the Exedra, which is a semi circular building in the classical style, and from which one then precedes into the Palace’s front gardens.

The art of landscaping in El Capricho is displayed in three different styles of classical gardenscapes: the ‘parterre’ or French garden, English landscaping and the Italian giardino. Facing the western approach to the palace is the ‘parterre’ whose hedges look as if they had been directly embroidered on the earth. In the lower part is the Italian giardino in the oldest part of the estate in which hedges alternate with tree-shaded corners, where one can soak up winter sun, or take cover from the heat in the shade of the branches. Nearby is the labyrinth which is expressly designed for playful hiding or amorous frolicking, is a laurel grove set as per the original wishes of the Duchess herself. Finally, there is the rest of the park, which is a typical English landscaped garden, echoing the natural forms of nature, most inviting for a stroll and finding a quiet corner. There are many love trees, elms, almond trees, Holm oaks and lilac bushes, which contribute their colours in springtime.

As for the palace itself, only the walls are left from the original building, rising three floors and finished off at each corner with towers. The inside has been remodeled, and houses the offices for the park services, but it also has kept some reflections of the past, as the Ministry of Culture would have it. So there is a grand ballroom, dining salons, a 6000 volume library, as well as the alcoves and chambers of the family members. As great patrons of the arts, the private quarters of the family were each decorated with some of the best art work of their day. In fact some of Goya’s best work, such as El columpio (The Swing), Las cuatro estaciones (The Four Seasons), La merienda campestre and La pradera de San Isidro (The Field of San Isidro) were commissioned for this palace.









Not far from the palace is the temple of Bacchus, which is a classical style garden structure with an oval floor base, surrounded by twelve Ionic columns and set on a rise, making it a romantic view from other parts of the garden.

Los caprichos

Besides the gardens the estate holds a number of decorative structures that are both temporary and unusual and which make the whole place into a sort of theme park. For playful exertion there is both an adult and children’s play area comprising a small fort that even has canons and a moat, and from which departs the stream watering most of the garden area. The Casa de la Vieja (Old Woman’s House) brings back the typical lifestyle of simple folk. There is also a hermit’s dwelling in ruins, and in which once lived an actual hermit who used to startle lost passerby. These are the ‘caprichos’ built to recall the lives of the more humble classes.

Water is present throughout the walk. A sinuous stream goes makes its way across the property, deep enough for row boats and in fact, uniting the games area and the lake with the Dance Casino, which can be reached by a small wharf called the Casa de Cañas. Decorated with mirrors and a large fresco, the casino is the work of Martin Lopez Aguado, and the top floor as well as the terrace were meant for holding grand parties, which gave the guests all the prestige that they believed themselves to have.



My Experience:

I had never heard of El Capricho gardens as it is not one of the ‘main’ tourist attractions of Madrid. Which I have to say, made this experience so much better. It truly is a small piece of heaven hidden behind grouped apartment buildings, surrounded by an eye-sore of a vine-covered metal link fence.

Well, my first experience with El Capricho was on a whim with one of my good friends, Craig in early-March. The first signs of spring had yet to show themselves as we headed on the 45 minute metro ride near Barajas Airport. I figured it would be nice to get out of the house for a little bit to see what Craig was explaining would be ‘well worth’ my time. When I first entered the gates my first thought was of absolute shock in the vast size of the place. One would not guess how massive this ‘garden’ is from behind the fence. Craig laughed at my jaw-dropped expression as we started down the dirt path. We spent a good two hours waling along the winding paths as I giddily took photos like a tourist. All I could think was, ‘Wow, this place is going to be absolutely breathtaking in a few months when spring really does arrive!”

I was right. In May, Dani was planning on visiting me in the ‘Centro’ for a nice Sunday of catch-up. I cooked us lunch and debated about the rest of our day as I stared at the gloomy gray sky threatening my ‘surprise’. But, figuring it was now or never, Dani and I hopped on the metro back towards El Capricho which had stolen my heart only weeks before. I told Dani that we were going to one of my favorite places in Madrid and that he would hopefully fall in love with it like I did. As we walked around the outskirts, I saw the same look of doubt on his face that I had with Craig. Oh, little did we know!

Luckily, the rain stayed away long with any other crowds that were scared away by the looming clouds. Within minutes, Dani looked at me and said, “Thank you for showing me this! I really needed a place like this right now.” I smiled happily as I new that this was a day neither of us was going to forget. We strolled around like mischievous kids thorough the secret trails of trees and abandoned structures of the ground. We had photo shoots at every opportunity taking advantage of the breath-taking landscape. Plus, it gave Dani and I time to talk about everything from our past adventuras to summer plans to relationships to the silly things that make our friendship so amazing.


As the minutes passed and we finally admitted that we had walked almost every inch of El Capricho, we set back off to the metro in absolute bliss. It had been one of the best days either of us had had in quite a long time.