Urban test site for search and rescue |
One other fun aspect of this part of my trip was a visit to a restaurant in the Tuscan hills looking down on Florence. Dinner was Italian time (started at 9 pm by which time I was ready to eat my hand), and it was a wonderful dinner. After, at 11:30 pm, our hosts (the Italian Firebrigade, who are first responders in earthquake crises) told us we would take a short walk up the hill to the summer villa of the deMedici family, one of the great ruling families of Renaissance Italy. So up we walked, past a hotel in the dark on a clear and starry night. Well, was I surprised! There was this huge villa (5 stories high), in perfect condition. They turned on the lights so we could see it, not quite as clearly as illustrated in the photo below, but enough to see the whole building including the portico with intact Renaissance frescoes, which we saw by climbing up the stairs in the front of the building.
We were invited inside (at 11:45 pm no less) to see the wine cellars and old kitchen of the villa, complete with a roasting device invented by Leonardo DaVinci. The wine in the cellars wasn't hundreds of years old; the oldest label I saw was 1962--still pretty old!
After the meetings I attended, I took the train to Venice where Chuck met me for a three day stay in the city of canals.
Venice in late January is rainy, so rainy that the few tourists who are around stay covered. That's why this photo of the famous Piazza San Marco is empty of people at 2 pm in the afternoon!
Piazza San Marco in the rain |
The Grand Canal from the Rialto Bridge |
High water on the sidewalk next to the canal |
A Gate to hold back the high water from a cafe |
These beautiful statues look as though they just might start prancing down the street. They were stolen from Constantinople in around 1200!
Joaquin Sorolla: Sewing the Sails |
The next museum we visited was the Ca' Pesaro International Gallery of Modern Art, which houses art, much of it Italian from Impressionism on. The paintings I liked best I could not photograph, so below are the postcards of the paintings. The Sorolla painting is really spectacular--about 6 feet high.
Kandinsky: ZigZag White |
We also spent a good afternoon at the Peggy Guggenheim museum of Modern Art. Ms Guggenheim was a remarkable collector; her museum has wonderful works by Braque, Picasso, Pollack, Kandinski among others. Two of my favorites are below:
Mare Ballerina: Severini |
Landscape with Red Spots: Kandinksy |
Of course we also just wandered around, ate some good food (including wonderful hot chocolate that was like drinking a candy bar), bought some lovely paper goods and a pair of earrings. Here's my cup of hot chocolate and me standing on a bridge:
My favorite event was a chance to see the opera at La Fenice, one of the oldest opera houses in Europe. They performed La Clemenza di Tito, Mozart's last opera, which is not often performed, though it is a wonderful opera and was beautifully performed. La Fenice is a very small opera house (less than 100 seats on the main floor). Here's our view (taken before the opera began):
Chuck and I asked another opera goer in our box to take a photo of us.
All in all a visit to remember.
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