The second year has begun! http://photos.tandlphotos.com/blog/2016/1/a-year-of-climbing-dangerously
Month: January 2016
Letters from Madrid – Museums

As I move from flamenco shows and the music scene to cover other areas of Madrid, I’m starting with my initial reactions to, and brief descriptions of, the Natural History Museum, Archaeology Museum and the Prado. We visited the Prado almost weekly and other art museums often. Most museums had free days, and we would go to those museums over and over on free days, so in future letters I will have more detailed descriptions of museums and exhibits.
April 18, 1996
Museums
We visited the natural history museum a few weeks back. It is pretty lame compared to what we have in Albuquerque. The first part of it is more of a history of natural science from the time when Carlos III dedicated the museum. The exhibits on this side of the building have animal specimens that are stuffed, mounted, dried, and bottled. There are books, notes, and letters about scientific principles, ideas, theories, and observations, along with examples of the tools and instruments used at the time. This stuff was fairly interesting. The rest of the exhibits on the north side of the building dealt with conservation and was not particularly new or interesting. We were about to suffocate in the enviro-better-feel-guilty-about-being-a-human theme when we made our escape over to the south side of the building where they had dinosaur bones, geologic and paleontologic exhibits. These we better, but still generally lame. The most interesting fossil was one of a dinosaur bird found in Spain. They had the fossil and a model of the bird. It was about the size of a robin with a beak full of teeth. All the other fossils were replicas of fossils and skeletons of dinosaurs that came from the U.S. and Argentina, of course. The exhibit on prehistoric man was good, which I would expect, since a lot of the remains of Neanderthals, Habilis, Erectus, and other early humans have been found in Spain. I think there are a few direct decedents of early man still walking the streets around here.
There is an excellent Archaeology Museum and a very good museum about the history of Madrid very near where we live. Spain has a great deal of historical treasures and just about every major civilization has been through and occupied Spain at one time or another. These museums are full of priceless artifacts and art works from prehistoric times through more recent times. There are also great art museums such as the Prado, the Reina Sofia and the Thyssen, plus a multitude of small art museums.
We go to the Prado almost every week end. It’s a good thing we looked at Goya’s paintings at the Prado the first few times we went. There is now a commemorative exhibit of his paintings celebrating 250 years since his birth that costs 1000 ptas/person to see, and the lines to get in are long. His black paintings done later in Goya’s life are interesting. These paintings are dark, loosely painted and powerful. They’re very expressionist and deal with mythology, religion, and war. There is one very modern painting of a dog buried up to his neck with the background painted like a sand dune. We also found the Bosch paintings. I figured Tristan would like Bosch since his paintings are so weird, with fantasy characters, landscapes and strange objects. Bosch was very disturbed from looking at his paintings. He has fantastic creatures, characters and scenes, that are full of action and layers of demented symbolism depicting the creation, earthly existence and hell. His explicit, lewd subject matter depicts a world view of the religious sect he belonged to. Nudity and sexual freedom are true to the creation, while marriage and clothing corrupt man and lead him to war and hell. Interesting world view for the 1600’s. Peter Brueghal the Elder depicted war as death winning. He also shows a very dim and demented view of life and grim depiction of war about 40 years after Bosch. Death’s army of skeletons are killing everyone, herding them into a coffin like structure that outputs more skeletons to join the war against humanity. Cities are on fire, men are hung on torture wheels, nailed through the head to trees and are being executed by skeletons. Death gets little resistance as his army sweeps over the land killing everything that lives. I’m glad not to have lived during the 1600’s, from these painters’ depictions of life.
Next architecture and planning…
Videos
Exposición: Goya en Madrid https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQi4O3fL1dk (English subtitles)
Hieronymus Bosch – Trittico del Giardino delle Delizie (spiegato ai truzzi) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DbXDmcVnAl8 (narration in Italian)
The Triumph of Death – Pieter Bruegel The Elder https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kjhLgI3WsX8
Police Under Sliver Moon
The End’s in Sight — A Year After A Ground Breaking Experience
Behind Bars
Smoke Break in downtown http://photos.tandlphotos.com/blog/2016/1/behind-bars
Minutes after Sundown
Letters from Madrid – 5th Flamenco Show

Sara Baras didn’t leave much of an impression in the fourth flamenco show. Belen Maya was much more interesting, but singer El Chocolate made the show in the 5th and last flamenco show we saw during our first three months in Madrid.
April 18, 1996
Flamenco
The fifth show included Chocolate and had a more modern dancer, Belen Maya, who was much more interesting that Sara Baras, but had too few moves and became quickly boring. Chocalate was excellent, but the guitarist who accompanied him and the other featured singer was totally boring. The other featured singer is not worth mentioning, as he did nothing extraordinary. What was extraordinary is that Fosforito and the young guitarist sitting in for Enrique del Malchor were special guests again. They seemed to have worked things out, because they were both great. A total change from Tuesday night. The guitarist had toned down his playing a bit, smoothed it out, and set himself to accompanying the cante. I hope he realizes that, his attention to the cante, and playing a slight more reserved, and in a more tastful manner, brought it home to the audience what a fine guitarist he is. It could be that the first guitaist was so boring that the new sound, lightning fast scales, and quick changes seemed fresh and fun in compairosn, where as Tuesday, he seemed busy and overpowering after Paco Cepero masterful playing. On Tuesday, Fosforito and his guitarist got a cool reception from the audience; but this night, they excited the audience, bringing gritos and applause for the great playing and emotionally, heart rendered words pouring forth from Fosforito’s pained, squinting face.
For the next several posts of Letters from Madrid…, I’m going to turn from music for a little bit and get into my observations and reactions to museums, architecture and planning, parks and open space, public restrooms, driving and tourists during our first three months in Madrid!
Videos
CHOCOLATE-JUAN HABICHUELA-FANDANGOS https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_9Z2OAVaO0
Mayte Martín & Belén Maya during IV Dutch Flamenco Biennale – Amsterdam, 1 February 2013 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1Yv9CBch5U
FOSFORITO Alegrías de Cádiz – Tesoros del Flamenco 1990 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hSpZjAzVqC0
Spunk Paints His Nails
Go ahead and make Spunk’s day — call him a Sissy if you dare! http://photos.tandlphotos.com/blog/2016/1/spunk-paints-his-nails
Spunk Discovers Fire
Snow Daze
The snow persists http://photos.tandlphotos.com/blog/2016/1/snow-daze


