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- <text id=90TT1520>
- <title>
- June 11, 1990: The Most Dynamic City In Europe?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 11, 1990 Scott Turow:Making Crime Pay
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TRAVEL, Page 86
- The Most Dynamic City in Europe?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Spurred by the 1992 Olympics, Barcelona claims the title with
- an exuberant revival
- </p>
- <p>By Margot Hornblower/Barcelona
- </p>
- <p> A Joan Miro sculpture towers over Barcelona's Parc de
- l'Escorxador, its riotous colors glinting in the sun. Around
- it, grandmothers in sneakers, stocky shopkeepers and children
- in starched frocks join hands. A brass band brays for a
- slow-motion minuet. Toes out! Toes in! Deliberately, then
- merrily, 500 people count steps. The sardanas are courtly
- affairs, far removed from the stomping passion of Spanish
- flamenco. Under the Franco dictatorship, the dances were banned
- as subversive evidence of Catalan nationalism. But now, on
- Sunday afternoons, they are as ubiquitous as barbershop
- quartets at Iowa county fairs. "They're a sign of our
- identity," says Joan Anglada, a furniture salesman, pausing for
- breath.
- </p>
- <p> A tourist set loose in born-again Barcelona bumps into such
- euphoric boosterism around every corner. "Catalonia is a
- nation!" exults Jordi Pujol, president of the autonomous region
- of 6 million people. "We have our own language, our own
- history, our own culture." To show it off, the city of 1.7
- million has seized upon the 1992 Summer Olympics, with its
- windfall of government money and free publicity, and has
- catapulted itself into the ranks of Europe's favored capitals.
- "You go to Milan, Paris or Hamburg, and people marvel that
- Barcelona has become the most dynamic city in Europe," says
- Jose Maria Marti Ruffo, a London-based Catalan businessman.
- </p>
- <p> Along the waterfront, where Christopher Columbus' statue
- points triumphantly out to sea, rusty railroad tracks were torn
- up to make way for two miles of sandy swimming beaches and
- palm-shaded cafes. About $2 billion worth of stadiums, hotels,
- restaurants and museums have been built or are under
- construction, a showcase for internationally known architects
- such as Richard Meier, Arata Isozaki and Jose Rafael Moneo.
- "It's an orgy of creativity," says Mayor Pasqual Maragall,
- grandson of Catalonia's most famous poet. A former lecturer in
- urban planning at Johns Hopkins University, Maragall invited
- such American artists as Claes Oldenburg and Ellsworth Kelly
- to make sculptures for a new park system that has become an
- international model of city planning.
- </p>
- <p> Aesthetes may complain that Barcelona lacks the glittering
- royal art galleries and grandiose vistas of London, Madrid or
- Paris and that its geography, a natural amphitheater framed by
- mountains and sea, produces a smog worthy of Los Angeles. Some
- may even view as excessive chauvinism the natives' insistence
- on speaking Catalan rather than Spanish. But those who take the
- time will discover in this most Mediterranean of cities a rare
- personality, fanatically avant-garde yet obsessively
- preservationist. First century Roman baths are being excavated
- amid the twisting streets of its dense Gothic quarter. The
- famous Picasso Museum is housed in a 15th century palace; the
- main Olympic stadium is a renovated 1929 arena. This month
- Antoni Tapies, Catalonia's best-known living painter, will
- open, in a refurbished art deco mansion, a foundation featuring
- four decades of abstract works. "Catalonia," says Tapies, "can
- be summed up in an old motto, seny i rauxa--prudence and
- daring."
- </p>
- <p> The daring part crops up in the kitschy surrealism of
- Salvador Dali; in the sensuous modernismo architecture of
- Catalonia's turn-of-the-century masters, Antonio Gaudi and
- Lluis Domenech i Montaner; and in the explosion of contemporary
- design that has transformed the city's nightclubs and even
- furniture stores into tourist attractions. If Madrid was ever
- a city of soldiers and aristocrats, Barcelona is a metropolis
- of merchants and artisans. Its fame springs from monuments like
- Gaudi's Templo de la Sagrada Familia (Sacred Family Cathedral),
- with its stone-dripped spires and wildly ornamented facades.
- But it is less a city where one tramps from one guidebook
- attraction to another than a place that unfolds like a treasure
- hunt, revealing itself in small clues: rococo streetlights and
- curlicued ironwork balconies; a stained-glass peacock, an art
- nouveau marvel, nestled above the door of Escriba, a celestial
- chocolate shop; a Gaudi-designed sidewalk of blue-green
- pavement stones carved with sea creatures.
- </p>
- <p> The discovered delights are more than visual. In the
- Boqueria, an open-air marketplace, five varieties of wild
- mushrooms are fried up for less than $5 at a simple lunch
- counter. The funicular to Tibidabo, Catalonia's answer to Coney
- Island, presents a panoramic view of the turquoise sea. Take
- in a concert at the flamboyant 1908 Palace of Music, with its
- lush mosaics and Wagnerian Valkyries. Pick up a souvenir at a
- street table staffed by separatist activists: a sticker of
- Snoopy hoisting the Catalan flag. (Wear it to the annual El
- Barca-Real Madrid soccer match--and be prepared for a
- fistfight.)
- </p>
- <p> In the summer, a visit to Barcelona can be steamy and is
- best punctuated with side trips to the ancient villages of the
- Pyrenees, with their Romanesque churches. In the fall, the city
- is at its cultural high season, with the Festival del Tardor,
- an international theater, dance and music extravaganza. Spain's
- best opera house, the gilded Liceo in Barcelona, features fine
- international singers, including homegrown stars Jose Carreras
- and Montserrat Caballe. No matter what the season, the traveler
- can feast at one of the fish restaurants of working-class
- Barcelona, its neon signs flashing and its laundry rippling from
- the balconies. Sadly, a new coastal-protection law threatens
- to shut down the parasoled beach tables, where you can enjoy
- paella while a barefoot, sad-eyed Gypsy girl plays a miniature
- accordion.
- </p>
- <p> Barcelonans inevitably end their evenings with a stroll up
- the Ramblas, the ebullient boulevard where all classes, ages
- and ideologies flow in a restless human torrent. This populist
- Champs Elysees, a Felliniesque vision, is lined with stalls
- selling flowers, parrots, canaries and turtles; newspaper
- kiosks with journals in eight languages; cafes dishing up
- snacks of fried squid and hard sausage; Gypsy fortune tellers,
- their tarot cards laid out on fold-up tables. On one street
- corner, Eduardo Mazo, an Argentine poet, has pasted his verse
- on billboards for more than a decade. "The Ramblas is the most
- magic mile in Europe," he says. "People begin at one end when
- they're tired of life. By the time they get to the other end,
- they're in love with life." And with Barcelona.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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