Giddy for Goya

…like a little girl.

Goya, the Spanish artist, was prolific in his works in no uncertain means. His styles were varied and each well executed. His emotion pouring out in every subtle- or quite brazen- stroke of colour. In some places his thoughts dripping out of the lines he played with. His Spanish-ness for show, loud and proud and stern and disgruntled, in so many of the themes he chose, telling the story of a nation and a man.

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This is The San Isidro Meadow, a meadow I’ve actually seen and sat upon. As many people as painted here in 1788 use the park today during Madrid’s saint day festivities– San Isidro being Madrid’s city saint.

Goya was so prolific, and his paintings so striking to a Spanish audience that had not seen something like this coming from a fellow countryman, that there is literally a word for how he painted colors: goyesco.
It refers to the way he could make pastel colors shine as if the were mother-of-pearl, an interesting trick indeed. A beautiful sunset full of glimmering bits of cotton candy colors is “goyesco.”
A matte silk dress that still glints in the light, might be described as “goyesco” as it moves in a room.

Carlota Joaquina, Infanta of Spain and Queen of Portugal Oil on canvas. 1785
In this painting, a personal favourite, the fabric of her dress truly seems to glint as actual fabric would. The color isn’t flat, the color is luminous and real. The color is goyesco.

Goya’s work is so famous beyond Spanish borders, that you’ve probably seen his work without even realizing it.

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Saturno, or Saturn devouring his son (in English) is such a famous work that it has been used extensively across the web. My first encounter with it was as a post on Tumblr, with no credit given. I loved it and later in my education was pleased to find it was Spanish.
Here it is used in a banner for a short story: https://www.sequestrum.org/meat-dreams

If you’re interested in viewing more of his work, here is what the Prado has in their collection: https://www.museodelprado.es/en/the-collection/art-works?searchObras=goya
P.S. The Prado museum website is ••incredible•• and lets you inspect works *very* closely when you click on them. Highly recommended look through 🙂

Who you meet abroad

Traveling in general you meet people who are just like you, but grew up on the other side of the planet.

You meet people you love but are nothing like you.
You meet people that give you a cringe deep in your spine, often because they remind you the things you hate about yourself.

I think everything ever written about going abroad mentions something about all the great people you meet, and I don’t want to add another mindless post saying the same thing as a bajillion other girls who spent six months in Europe.

So I’m literally going to tell you who I met abroad:

Oda (codename: Norge; Norweigan Princess)
Before moving to Spain, I decided I wasn’t going to make friends, I didn’t have time for that! I had museums to visit until the security guards recognized me and direct object pronouns to figure out how to use (FINALLY).
Then the second day of class I get paired up with the freaking cool looking Norwegian girl and there was no looking back. I thought she was probably too good for a silly American. I was wrong.
A lot of pints of sangria, school nights spent dancing until 4 am, and afternoons studying in the basement at the chillest bar in all of Malasaña, I am so glad Adrián (a grammar professor) paired us up! She’s one of the coolest humans I know, and I look forward to years of being jealous that I don’t live in Norway.

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Oda to the left, Lorena to the right

Lauren (codename: Lorena)
Lorena is from Boston, now works for a swanky travel company based out of London, and has a black kitty named Saul. She’s cool.
Lorena’s first major role in my life in Madrid involved dragging my useless body into a taxi after sitting on a cobble stone street with me (its an involved story I’ll probably leave off this blog for the time being *blushes*).
Lorena was my partner when a British guy dragged us to a bull fight and witnessed me almost get into a fight with a French guy over a seat (another future story for the blog). Lorena new the shady bars in Lavapies where you could get cheap buckets of Spanish beer, and always had the hookup on a restaurant I’d never been to.
Lorena  was happy, and loud, and an instigator after my own heart.

Nikki (bartender from Jersey who you can’t steal from)
Nikki had a backpack and a purse that were lined with wire, so you couldn’t slash through them and steal their contents. Nikki was not playing around. Having grown up using the best metro system in the US– the New York subway– she was used to being cautious on public transportation. Nikki was as loud, passionate, and encouraging of new things as I. She was perhaps (read: definitely) more eager to do something wild as I was. Nikki was the only person in my study abroad program I got super close to, and the only person in it my age, as well. She was such a comfort to have, and such a vivid, alive person to have the joy of sharing life with for a semester.
She’s also a top notch person to have drunk conversations with, which I’m sure her extensive bar-tending background plays into nicely. One night in something posing as an Irish pub, but really just a trap for Spanish guys to take home unsuspecting American girls (or a great place for cheap cheap cidre for the savvy), she and I had an under the influence conversation about what we liked in our significant others that was remarkably bonding.

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Trinh, left / Nikki, right– both q drunk

Trinh (Spanish edition)
The September before I left for Spain I got a text message from a childhood best friend “Hey what are you doing the weekend of the 29th?” I had no plans, and she was going to be in town. Why? Because she was leaving for Spain two days later.
OH, you know, BY THE WAY, I’ll be in Spain in January.
I probably would have died in Spain without her.
That’s only a little bit of a hyperbole.
Also, the kind soul who introduced me to Don Simon 3€ bottled sangria. The kind soul who met me at the airport and helped me lug my HUGE suitcases across a city. The kind soul who let me stay with her the first few days and the last few days in my time in Madrid.
Trinh and I have been friends our whole lives (since we were 7), and seeing her in Spain, all free and fun, was amazing. My glee that we got to experience each other abroad is unspeakable.

Sara (codename: The Italian)
Trinh’s roommate, and “the love of [her] life.”
I was welcomed into Trinh’s flat as much by Sara as I was by Trinh, and in time, my presence there was as expected by Sara as it was by Trinh. She came to me with questions about English slang as eagerly as she did Trinh (only less so, because OBVZ I didn’t live with her). Sara and Trinh had a third roommate, another Italian named Roberta, who was also very sweet, but had a harder time communicating, but because of Sara was such a pleasant part of our friend group. Sara has the smoothest, grooviest dance moves, the cool casualness of a European, and was fun to slowly and surely expose to all kinds of liberal American views 😉

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forgive the orientation of this photo, but here is the crew +

Bier, German for beer

Naturbier: German beer brewery in Madrid

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This joint operates as a bar, serving its own product.

I’m not a beer drinker by nature and I, without having to think about it, sipped down two beers here.
I had an amber and a ruby ale. They were both much better than I think beer is generally, much less cloying on the tongue, perhaps even “fresh.” The ruby was especially good and the most beautiful colour.

Two friends who were there with me were also not big beer fans, and they, too, enjoyed the beer here just fine.
The German friend who showed us this place, Felix, was very pleased with it over all, and I’m sure a wee slice of home was as comforting to him as the Mexican food places were to the other Texan and I.

We sat it what I’ll describe as the basement (we had to go down stairs, it fits). We were out in a little room off to one side, and that night we were alone, even though upstairs it was wild packed. It was unusual to be alone in a room anywhere, so the group of international study abroad students reveled in it.

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My amigos Alex and Marc ordered German appetizers, so really just one huge piece of sausage that was so odd to get served on a plate by itself that I don’t even remember what else it was we got. I can’t even remember what it tasted like I was so taken aback by it as it was served!

They serve tapas here, but why would you come to a German beer bar to have Spanish food, when you could wander a little further up the street and get something from a place meant for Spanish food. Don’t be an idiot.
Or an annoying tourist, that’s worse.

Casa de Hernanz

Alpargatas, known more broadly as espadrilles, which is the French word for them. This place ^^ sells the best.

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Espadrilles history can be traced back to Catalunya (the traditional spelling of the region). This region is so generally thought of as the region of Spain that holds Barcelona, but historically the cultural area of Catalunya extends into part of France. This is where the shoe has its old, old origins. Eventually the shoe’s easy fabrication and simple style wandered down into the main bodies of both Spain and France, for the French to call espadrilles and the Spanish to call alpargatas.

The oldest maker of alpargatas in Spain is Casa de Hernanz, which has been consistenetly open since some time in the 1800s. This shop has not closed in the face of two new centuries, a dictator, the rise of drug use and crime in the neighbourhood its in. It’s impressive. Now with the revitalization of La Latina, above mentioned neighbourhood, this store is very, very popular again.

Go on a weekday as close to their opening time as possible.
If you wait until a Friday in the afternoon the line will be a block long.

This is after I’d already waited an hour and a half.
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SO many styles, in SO many colors.
They have everything in the world of espadrilles from very traditional Spanish regional styles, all the way to something you’d have to pay $50 for at the Gap. Things a Spanish grandpa would wear, and things your hip big sister back home wears.

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I have a black pair, that laces around the ankle: one of the eldest and most traditional styles of this shoe.
Here is a blurry photo, with them in it:
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The Security Guards Recognize You

Officially, I moved to Madrid to participate in a Hispanic Language & Culture program with the study abroad group ISA.
Really, I picked Madrid specifically to be closer to Real Madrid, but the renowned art museums didn’t hurt anything.

The “language and culture” program was really me living the dream of being an art history major, plus a grammar class.
Hours and hours a week pouring over the cultural works Spain had to offer the world.

It was magical, and in every way I could have wanted, a great fulfillment of The Dream.
One class at La Universidad de Antonio de Nebrija was simply an Art of the Prado class. However, it was even simpler than that; the prof had divided the semester into thirds and we covered the bodies of work of El Greco, Velasquez, and Goya: three of the most major (according to the professor the most major) Spanish artists.

This class required four outings, as a class, to El Prado, easily one of the most traditionally beautiful museums I could imagine.

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In my own time, I visited the Reina Sofia frequently. To the point where I am pretty sure some of the security guards recognized me.
To the point where I gave a friend a walking tour of the museum once, and was deemed a sort of art official amongst my friends because of how thorough my tour was.
Most of the Dalí paintings in Madrid are in the Reina, and that’s what so often led me there. Staring for longer than may be standard at an advertisement he designed in the 20s with a lobster on it, red and ridiculous. I loved it.

Once, in one of the long, thin galleries that led into a larger room, there was a movie playing that had been frame-by-frame water coloured sometime in the early 20th century. I stood, enraptured, for near 30 minutes.

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That’s how the museums in Madrid are.
There is also a museum of archaeology that is astounding in its span of history in relation to dear Spain. The various peoples that had populated, died, and there things been buried in the Iberian dirt; all amazing, many rich, the displays and information stunning for someone from a country only a few hundred years old.

Museums of Madrid: do that.
And really, is it a vacation if you don’t visit a museum?*

*No

Toledo by morning

There it was.
The Hapsburg double-headed eagle.

I have spent most of my life enraptured in the opulence and tragedy of the story of Marie Antoinette, and as I got older and my reading options expanded I started digging through the story of her family– the Hapsburg emperors.

The Hapsburg family was so large and powerful, there ended up being two ruling branches of it- the Spanish and the Austrian.

Toledo was my first adventure outside of Madrid with my study abroad program, ISA. There was the seal of the Hapsburgs, the double headed eagle, staring back at me from everywhere.

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The city had been the royal seat and the Spanish capital under the Hapsburg dynasty, and their seal is everywhere– now the city seal, the double headed eagle regally marks where you find yourself now.

I was awed, standing ahead of my group, having unknowingly come along to a place full of a history so dear to me.

Then there was the cathedral, San Juan de los Reyes.

I was enthralled with the patio, full of citrus trees, the columns and walls carved incredibly: unicorns, dragons, centaurs hidden amongst the stone vines.

I could have stayed in that passage way for hours, just finding all the little quirky carvings. I hope to someday be able to do just that.
This was the trip where my character introduction line (like Superman’s “Its a bird, its a plane!”) was begun: “¡Mirandita, venga!”

I lulled to the back of the group. I kept quiet. I soaked in the detail, lingering over art and architecture- running my fingers over mythical figures that had been carved before even the Spanish set foot in Texas- until the last member of my group exited the room, then scurried after.

That is the overarching feeling I have in/about Spain: I just want to stop and watch. I am not a quiet person, but when my attention has been caught, oh lord, let me watch.

 

Good, good Toledo.

 

App Attack

One of the biggest cities in Europe, Madrid is not always simple to navigate. There are apps for that (also is it aps or apps? Yo no sè).

So, a list of apps (I’m running with it) to help you get around the city!!

First: Snapchat
because not everything is worth putting up on Instagram, not everything needs to be seen by your nana on Facebook, and you Do Not Need to drunk text from across an ocean and snaps are deletable.
ALSO Snapchat recently introduced a feature like iPhone’s Facetiming, so a wifi calling is free internationally (or across the street) for anyonw with Snap and a stable wifi signal!

Second: Citymapper
Oh you’re hopelessly lost and a tinge of fear is starting to creep in at the corners of your heart? Citymapper has you.
The app is like a step-by-step map that can take you anywhere, much more direct than even the Maps App on iPhone.
It can also take you to local hotspots.
I really loved this app and found it quite easy to navigate. Also it saved me once when I got brave and went on a two hour walk in a neighborhood I thought I knew better than I actually did.

Third: City Guides TripAdvisor
This app has available guides you can download for various cities around the world, Madrid is included. The guide can be accessed even when you’re not connected to wifi. It has metro stations and major attractions. It is helpful to get around a very big city full of a lot of great things. This is especially useful if you’re okay with staying on the beaten path– a tourist’s super guide.

Fourth: WordRef
for all those times you want to be smart, but don’t know enough words to even get to sound half stupid– this app has all the smart words (and the stupid ones, too)

Also, you’ll probably need WhatsApp, as all the Spanish kids you come into contact with will use WhatsApp instead of standard texting, for a milieu of reasons. Get hip with it!

Wine, Water

You’ll realize in time spent abroad that alcohol is generally cheaper than water at… anywhere.

Wine 1,50€ and then there’s water: 3€
**blank stare**
a few moments later: **wry smile**

The same is generally true of beer, it’ll be like 1€ a lot of places. Granted, these are not big servings, but it is something to take into account. Especially since the same is true of alcohol and cokes. (I’m from Texas, if its carbonated and sweet, it’s a coke. I’m not sorry.)

So this is a good segue for an important topic when living in Spain: drinks versus drunk.

Drinks: what the Spanish do.
A few drinks spread over some snacking (ahem, tapas) throughout an evening

Drunk: what Americans abroad are known for.
Two things of boxed white wine (14% alcohol by volume, and like 3€–BEWARE) and a few cheap, scraggly bars that have free shots later.

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Actually, Americans are pretty reviled in the nicer clubs and bars in Madrid, I found, because of the typical wild-child, travelling-on-Daddy’s-dime, Greek row chump that has drunkenly occupied the space before you.

So, as someone who hopes to live abroad again, hopefully Madrid Round II, let me ask of you: be careful with the cheap and easy access to alcohol and when you do get so drunk you lay down in front of a cheap club and have to be hauled into a taxi by people you’ve only known briefly… try not to repeat that.

Una chiquitina vacación

There is a little bar in a plaza near La Bicicleta– a cafe I was a regular at– se llama Las Vacaciones.

This place has a glorious Sunday brunch and a variety of mojitos (like a coffee one, that as gross as mint coffee may sound is delish). But the real real: that brunch has bomb options and their tapas are always so, so good.

A great place to drink when it’s not late enough for Madrileños to really be “out” yet for the evening (read: before 11pm).
This bar seems to have more girls drinking here than any other place I kicked it, and I think that the female owners of this place may feed into that– like maybe its a known femme space in the city? I don’t know for sure, but the frequency of it being a girls-only crowd was odd for, what seemed to me, a highly male city.

Vacaciones is the place one of my dearest friends in Spain first told me about the experiments he did in his internship and my love of the word “chiquitin” was solidified**. It’s a great place to get close to people (literally, its tiny) and as bright as it is, and as happy as the decor is the mood just sets you off in a whirl of good energy.

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There were always a hodge podge of visitors to the city and locals, so be prepared for the typical Spanish stares, but also maybe drunk Australians.

Here’s the place’s website: http://www.vacacionesbar.com/

**Chiquitin: a typically Castillian (i.e. not Spanish-speaking America) word meaning “very small.” Like “chiquito,” which you’ve probably heard.

The Time I Drove

So, one of the, like, five times I missed something from home while abroad it was driving. Where I live in the US I commute back and forth to work 30 minutes everyday, and I miss public transportation (namely the metro) All The Time.
However, in Spain I just sort of craved getting behind the wheel sometimes. Some nights waiting for my line to come just took to long, or I wanted to dart somewhere real quick without seeing anyone, or just turn up the music real high and go exploring.

So, in February on a spontaneous trip to the Shangri La that is the island of Mallorca, my roommate Emma and I rented a Fiat 500 from the most casual rental place along the beach in the Arenal part of the island, and I got to live the fantasy of being a Fiat owner for a day. That’s a dream my friend, and I got to live it.

Now, if you had Emma tell about this day (namely, my driving) it would probably be a lot less rosy than my version, but stay with me here.
We took that sweet baby car and drove it up into the mountains through some of the twistiest roads I have ever driven on. I drove faster than my counterpart may have been comfortable with. ::Coughs:: It was like the most beautiful parts of New Mexico and Colorado, but warm and beyond the mountains– not plains but blue, a wild blue, the sea.
(If you want to see the wild blue https://www.instagram.com/p/zODwIxHIlG/?taken-by=neverneutral)

09 Terraced olive tree fields
In Mallorca, along the thin line of highway, they have terraced fields full of bright colored flowers, olive trees, and many of the villages on the highway up to this big look out point have citrus trees filling their back yards, all of which were in bloom… in February.

The scent filtering in through the air vents, a feeling not unlike lust starting to make my brain swim. Before I left to study abroad, so many people told me I’d fall in love in Spain, and I did– again and again, with Spain itself.

Driving through the itty bitty little ancient streets of Sóller, that were never intended for the unfathomable automobile, weaving through residentials peeking into tiny back yards so full of citrus trees it was like something made up in a writer’s fever dream.

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Getting stuck in a circle of one-way streets when all we needed was the high way, and then driving down a TERRIFYING glorified foot path of a street with a 40 foot drop to one side into a swiftly moving creek, up a steep incline: it was great.I took a picture of that teency road just in case we lived, to prove I had done it. Survive Sóller 2015 √

(the foot path here)

We took the big, major highway home: much straighter and punctuated by a very hot toll booth worker. I’ll take it.

We’ll have to do a recap of my whole trip to Mallorca sometime, it was pretty magical. I would say my best vacation ever.