Today was museum day. We got a bit of a late start and headed out to the Prado. Today must´ve been museum day at local schools also because there were a ton of little kids running around. Our favorite moment was when a huge pack of them surrounded the statue of the famous painter Goya and then all of the sudden we heard them all spontaneously chanting ¨Goya, Goya, Goya¨ like they were cheering for a sports star. Spaniards love their painters I guess.
The Prado was awesome. We´re learning more and more about art the more museums we visit. But since we´ve seen so many, we´re becoming a little jaded. The cool thing about the Prado is that they have a lot of Spanish painters, Goya, Picasso, and del Greco. The coolest thing we saw today was Goya's ¨black paintings¨. Around 70 he was widowed, deaf, and really pissed off. He locked himself in a house in the middle of nowhere. They later found his house covered in these paintings made of printers ink with lovely themes like Saturn eating his own child, giants terrorizing villages, and witches meeting with a Satanic goat. Yes, nice cheerful stuff to surround yourself with.
After getting museumed out, we headed for a garden retreat. We first toured the Botanical Gardens accidentally.
Next we headed over to the next museum, the Reina Sophia, or as we soon learned, Musuem of weird modern stuff called ¨art¨. The most famous thing here is Picasso´s Guernica, which protested Franco letting Hilter bomb a small Spanish town, Guernica, to test their bombs. It´s gigantic and somber, but being Picasso, still strange. After we saw that, we wandered through the rest of the museum, saw a painting that consisted of one black dot on a white canvas, and left still without an appreciation for modern art.
After our time wondering through the art galleries in Madrid, we returned to what we know... eating... Getting off the metro it was time for chocolate delights from the corner bakery and my favorite, their rich truffles and my new friend, Tinto De Verano. Spaniards don´t drink sangria, but they do drink this...
We wanted to partake in a restaurant in Madrid that just so happens to be the oldest restaurant in the world. It started serving customers in 1725, no lie. It's called Casa Botin. Look it up in the Guinness book of world records. We were told that they served a particular dish better than any restaurant in the city, roasted suckling pig. Suckling pig, for those unaware, is a piglet that is six weeks old or younger. Kris just so happened to take a great pic of one in one of the many restaurant windows here in town.
For now, we are off to rest and get prepared for tomorrow. We travel by train to Toledo sometime in the morning to discover some more history and soak up the culture (walking up and down hills of course). By the way, I am sure that tonight will not end until Kristen gets her chocolate and churros... I mean... the baby gets its chocolate and churros... it sure does love those things...
4 comments:
sounds like ya'll are having fun! I want churros and chocolate!!
Can you please bring me back that pig in the window?
Thanks,
Lauren
I love that you take pictures of food displays...it makes the paragraphs about the food much more entertaining! It looks like y'all are having a great time :)
Sorry I'm a little behind. Trying to help mom get ready for the trip to MS in the morning. The food looks good and the suckling Pigs (that's right....there are 2 in the picture) look almost too cute to eat.....but I'm sure they were good. We used to eat food like that also if you remember Blake......it was called "yellita(sp) and consisted of essentially all of the pig plus some barley and spices.....you and Megan used to love the stuff.....
Wish I could be there with you like in Paris....keep taking the good pictures and we will want to see them all when you return...try not to get sick anymore.....
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