I don’t like to use this blog for personal rants, but we
live I interesting times at this moment, and I couldn’t resist, so here goes:
I just made my last trip to Barcelona. My last was over half a century ago, when I
was a graduate student in art history and looking at where I wanted to plant my
professional feet. That was a time when,
if I wanted to study old stuff and not the contemporary world, the U.S. was
definitively not an option. Italy was
being assaulted by art historians from every country, and now they were
beginning to invade the other canonical countries of “Western” (i.e. Western
European) Art. All except for Spain,
which, except for some 17th-century big guns like Velázquez,
Zurbarán, Murillo and Ribera, or that 18th-19th century
powerhouse Goya, was considered an artistic wasteland until the early 20th
century, at least up until the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936.
Contrarian that I am, I fell in love with Medieval Spain,
and particularly Catalonia, even though they had kicked their Jews out in 1492,
and the country was now being run by Fascists.
The Barcelona of 1964, when I first went, was still a somewhat derelict
place: most of its historic buildings were very Guardia
Civil with their patent leather hats everywhere.
grimy, the interior of the
church of Santa Maria del Mar still bore marks of the fire it suffered in 1936,
there were still a large number of elderly maimed individuals who had barely
survived the civil war, and you saw My Favorite Medieval Catalan Painting; Augustine Crowned, by Jaume Huguet; a fragment of something originally much, much bigger. |
But this apparent wasteland was good territory for what I
wanted to study. There were still prewar
scholars active there, though they were ageing, at this point, little activity
among young Spaniards (much less Americans) to take up studies again. Dusty archives, dingy dark churches, and
wonderful but somewhat chaotic museums beckoned--and I returned in 1966, ready
to take the leap.
I stayed two years while researching my doctoral
dissertation, and even discovered new documentation and works of art: the Art
Historian’s dream! On top of that, I got
to know some Natives, mostly young Catalan painters, few of whom subsequently became
famous. I also learned Catalan,
technically illegal during Franco’s time.
If anything, my love affair with Catalonia, Barcelona and Catalan
deepened. By this time, Fascist rule was running dry, and Catalan cultural
revolt was beginning to stir. I cried
when I had to go back to the U.S. to take up a real job.
But the affair kept on.
In Oregon, where I was teaching, l looked for someone to talk Catalan
to, and so met my future husband. Maybe
we could eventually move back to Barcelona, and live happily ever after in my
favorite city.
In the long run, it didn’t work out that way. I may speak Catalan, but I’m an American, and
no matter how distasteful I find American politics at the moment, here I
stay--half a century later.
Though the marriage didn’t last, my love of Barcelona and
medieval Spanish art history kept on over the years. I went back to Barcelona a lot, and could
easily slip back into speaking Catalan.
It was a real comfort zone. But it’s only now that I realize that my relationship with
Barcelona was basically a professional one.
Going back now, as a jubilated art historian, I realized that this intellectual marriage has run its
course.
There are lots of Catalan art historians now, many of them
wonderful scholars, who live among the artworks and can study them
everyday. Archives are much better
organized, and the digital age has made so much material immediately accessible
with out my having to leave home. The
historic buildings are much, much cleaner, museum works are carefully and
thoughtfully labeled and many are beautifully restored and well displayed and
lit. The discipline, thank you very
much, has also changed, and the emphasis on context and cultural art history,
in which I participated in its pioneering generation, is now one of its most
respected approaches, part of a growing tool in our methodological toolbox.
So well has Barcelona organized its artistic riches, that it
has become a sort of touristic theme park.
Part of this shift is probably due to the fact that it has become a
regular stop for gigantic cruise ships.
Hoards of tourists, in the city for a day, pack the Gothic Quarter and
swarm Gaudi’s idiosyncratic structures, led by their handlers holding aloft
furled umbrellas or pinwheels. I went up
to check on the progress of the Sagrada Familia, which were just the four
towers that Gaudi left behind at his death in 1926, unchanged when I first got
there in the 60’s. At that point, nobody was there, and you could even climb up
into the towers and on the walkway between them. It’s now nearly finished, and will serve as
the city’s co-Cathedral when it is.
There were so many tourists around it that I couldn’t even get close,
unless I wanted to pay admission and wait an hour or so in line to get in. I fell into conversation with some cruise
tourists, who explained that they were embarking again in two hours, and so
didn’t have time to go inside, in fact they still had three more Gaudí
buildings and his park to drive by before they sailed on.
Sagrada Familia and its Tourists |
Admission is charged everywhere, including all of the old
Gothic churches and the Cathedral itself.
I know I must sound elitist, but there’s the fun and the thrill of
discovery if you are herded through in fifteen minutes?
Maybe it’s because I’m officially an Old Fogey, which puts
me squarely in the category of one who feels that “it’ll never be the same
again.” There was a lot not to love
about the city in in the waning days of Francoism in the 60’s, but I was so
much younger then, and seeing its good points through the screen of youthful
callowness.
Demonstration: Passeig de Gràcia |
On the other hand, the Catalans themselves are
terrific. The day after I got there,
there was a remarkable demonstration: people of many different groups protesting the neglect of their country by the European Union “Pooh-Bahs.”There were hundreds of people who formed an
unbroken line along the Passeig de Gràcia, from the Plaça de Catalunya to the
Diagonal, organized by affiliations, from Anarchists (they’re back) to
feminists to Greenpeace, from the very young to the very old. Such a demonstration would, of course, have
been unthinkable half a century ago.
The Infamous #29 |
I can even update the Vampire of Barcelona for you a
bit. The infamous Carrer Ponent, where
she lived at number 29, has long been renamed the Career Joaquim Costa--and
this way before I ever got to Barcelona.
But when I first came in the 1960’s it was still the Infamous Raval, or
as we called it then, the top portion of the Barrio Chino. I used to go there to study at the Biblioteca
de Catalunya, which has always been located there, but I would kind of slink in and out, keeping my eyes out for who knew what.Now Carrer Joaquim Costa, though not exactly gentrified (and, of course, downed by graffiti), is far less
menacing. It appears to be an Asian
neighborhood now; the north Africans live a little further east, towards the
harbor. Number 29 is still there, and
looks pretty unchanged and not particularly inviting, but trees line the
street, and just around the corner is MACBA, Barcelona’s contemporary art
museum. But I guess the cruise-ship
Barcelona itinerary does not include the infamous Enriqueta Martí, because most
of the people on the street seem to be locals.
MACBA, Barcelona's Contemporary Art Museum: Right Around the Corner |
So now I’ve seen all the art Barcelona has to offer me for
the umpteenth time, and its cleaner now.
Everything is publicly written in Catalan. Most of the Catalans I knew, including my
late ex-husband, are long gone, and so it’s time to look at other places, up to
now unseen, with new eyes.
And maybe with all the turmoil here, it’s right to be right
here, right now. We may not agree with
our recent political outcomes, but we are free to speak out and to organize our
own objectives, objections and outcomes---and hopefully these very American values will
continue……..as we soldier on.
Thanks for this, Judy. Not self-indulgent at all. I agree completely. I can only imagine how Barcelona was in the old grimy days, but I know I would have preferred it, too, rather than this mass theme park now. Did you get over to Poblenou?
ReplyDeleteI only got one toe dipped into your roiling river of memory and visits but I will never forget sharing Barcelona with you, Judy!
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