Monday, February 23, 2009

No Sightings of Bogart or Bergman





This is the Hassam II Mosque in Casablanca, Morocco. Begun in 1986, it was finished in 1993. Six architects, five Moroccan and one French, designed the impressive structure built upon the sea according to an inspiration received by Hassam II in his study of the Koran. The granite came from Sweden and the marbles from Italy, Morocco and the Sahara. The tower is 200 meters (600 feet) high, and hydropower opens and closes a movable roof. Only the mosques at Mecca and Medina are larger.





20,000 workers labored 24 hours (three 8-hr. shifts) to create this mosque. Artisans numbered more than 4,000. All of the plaster- and cedar-work were hand-done; the doors are titanium and bronze; and natural dyes provide the color. 120,000 people can pray here at one time.



The baths in this mosque reflect a Turkish influence. There are three pools of different temperatures and one begins with the warmest.














In a downtown market you can find horsemeat,






Rabbit and ?,

 A vast array of olives,


Or produce.
The selection, while different from home, is varied and flavorful.
Bon appetit.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Barcelona

While Roger traveled to the States my friend Anne
visited me here. Together we went exploring. 
Our first stop: Barcelona.

This is architect Antoni Gaudi's 
Sagrada Familia (Holy Family), a church
he worked on from 1883 - 1926. Unfinished still,
construction is expected to be completed in 50 years.

Gaudi intended the Park Guell to be a housing project
but the 30-acre park reflects the architect's attention to
detail and his flights of fancy.

Mosaics adorn a bench that wraps around a terrace. 


Another of Gaudi's works is the
 Casa Batllo where the balconies
resemble skulls and, according to Rick Steve,
the "roof suggests a cresting dragon's back." 
Gaudi drew his inspiration from the legend
of St. George and the dragon.
Along the pedestrian thoroughfare in this city's
Old Town, the produce market offers produce,
an eggs-only booth (including emu eggs),
fish (you can touch an eel), nuts, dried fruits, and candy.

In the harbor Christopher Columbus points West.


Next: Think of Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman.



Monday, February 2, 2009

Prague -- The Sixth Series

Once upon a time, Art-Deco Style was popular in Prague.
Every economist will love this mural and
mathematicians will appreciate the use of the Mobius strip.
I think it raises the question each national economy faces:
Guns or Butter? Any thoughts on this?
This image required a double-take. Fortunately it's a statue.
Dvorak hailed from Prague. Apparently before being a composer,
he was an artist. Here, beside the banks of the Vltava River,
old and new statues offer contrasting styles and subject matter.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Prague -- The Fifth Series

Imagine that you are the 16th century astronomer
Tycho Brahe and have fallen out of favor with the
powers-that-be in your native Denmark. Emperor Rudolf II
invites you to relocate your equipment, and yourself, to Prague
where he sets you up in his castle, the Belvedere. You take a 
new assistant, the young and promising Johannes Kepler,
who among his many accomplishments in astronomer is the discovery
that the planets travel in elliptical paths, not circular ones.


Emperor Rudolf often spent evenings with the
astronomers -- sometimes just sitting on the veranda of the castle
and discussing novas, planets, and orbital paths. 
Adjacent to the castle are the Royal Gardens
featuring plants from Italy, Spain, and Asia. 

In the plaza across from Prague's National Theatre
we came upon an exhibit featuring The Year of the Universe
2009. Photographs of earth, the planets, galaxies, and stars
greeted visitors and regaled the curious. Here is Roger
"standing" next to the Pleiades.

Poems accompanied the photographs. Here's one:

A school of frogs sat in the mud.
Their gaze fixed on the heavens.
Old teacher frog did all he could
To hammer home the lessons.