Sunday, 23 November 2008

Barcelona, Sagrada Familia

I went down to Barcelona for 3 days to visit my old mate Sean and his lovely wife Marta.
First up was a visit to the Sagrada Familia, Barcelona's most famous Gaudi cathedral, and a most amazing building.
Construction started in 1882, and it is expected to continue until at least 2041! Now thats a lot of work!


Front of the building, with the Nativity Facade. These 4 towers are repeated at the back, and when finished there will be 18 towers!

The Nativity facade

Baby Jesus

The 3 wise men bring 2 pigeons as a gift - not so wise after all!

Angel in my Harp

Inside the building, its chaos! Here we see some fine examples of Authentic Spanish style scaffolding, circa 2008

A model of the finished inside. Most of gaudi's designs were inspired by nature. The columns are inspired by trees, and you can see the joints are modelled on tree joints, and the top of the columns branch out like a tree.
He also models parts on shells, rosebuds, flowers, waves and all sorts of incredible things. A most amazing man!


Part of the ceiling
One can go up to the top of the towers for a panoramic view, but it can currently only be done by a tiny lift, so with a wait of over an hour, I thought I would give that a miss. Pity!

Stained glass

At the other side of the Nativity facade is the Passion Facade. The sculptures were added to this in 1987, and they came in for a lot of stick, as the abstract style was so different from Gaudi's style. Personally, I loved them!
2 mourners at the crucifiction

Soldier on horseback


Soldiers at the crucifiction

Quite odd this, as the cross comes out at a great angle over you in the facade, instead of being upright

I must be honest here, I did not take this photo. This is the finished look of the church, which will be able to fit 13 000 people!
The central spire will be 50m taller than the current towers, and at night beams of light will shine out of the armsof the cross up top.
A 3rd facade is currently being worked on, the Glory Facade, about the life and death of mankind.
Sadly, Gaudi died in 1926, so missed out on seeing a lot of his masterpiece!

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Do you know, how Gaudi died?
A street tram ran over him in one of the centric places in Barcelona and
as he laid injured and anonymous, the gathering crowd were unaware that this was the idolized architect himself.
...He would be glad if he could see how the architects followed his plans...