Friday, November 13, 2009

Wanderlust: Florence

Old-world charm, anyone?

Santa Croce is a great gathering point for locals and travelers alike.


People gather over the Arno to watch the sun fade to black.

Wanderlust: Florence


Those fortunate enough to live on the west side of the Arno--as seen here--have an unbelievable view of the Florence city-scape to the east. Jealousy overcomes us all.

Markets offering local goods are bountiful throughout the city.

Few places put on the Christmas ritz like Florence.


Florence has long reached for the heavens, starting with its grandiose churches.




Florence: A Rebirth, Again And Again

A large portion of the world's art is housed in Italy. The majority of that art is found in Florence. The city is literally overflowing with great achievements. There have been many influential cities throughout history. London birthed the Industrial Revolution. Berlin ended a looming war. Lisbon acted as an embarkation point during the Age of Discovery. New York opened its arms to the world. Yet, is anything more important--more influential--than the Renaissance in Florence?

The Renaissance was just that: a rebirth. It ended centuries of western futility and stagnancy. How could one city--one!!-- and its transformation help cultivate the minds of Dante, DaVinci, Boccaccio, Michelangelo, Donatello, Galileo, Machiavelli, the Medici, and Raphael? Amazingly, this is a short list of people born in the city. The influence the city had throughout Europe cannot be quantified. Without this explosion of science, art, thought, exploration, etc., much of what we know today may not exist at all. How was all this possible? I don't know. Sometimes, it's best to just shut up and enjoy.

Today, Florence is a cultural gem. The Uffizi museum is a treasure chest of artistic accomplishments. The Ponte Vecchio is so precious that even the German army had implicit orders not to damage but a stone on its facade. The cobbled streets click and clack with the sound of high heals, as Florentine women--with their dark, sexy legs--somehow navigate over crack and crevice on their way to work. Even the air is filled with intoxicating scents. In autumn, the smell of homemade stock permeates the air, inviting us to eat and be merry.

Good food, unlike the art, is harder to find. That the city attracts millions of tourists a year means finding truly authentic food can be difficult. All it takes, fortunately, is a little patience. Walking the concrete forest of downtown, one can stumble upon a food vendor offering to its loyal patrons the delectable and delightful lampredotto--boiled cow stomach, often served with dry Tuscan bread and spicy salsa. It's rich and sinful and addictive, and it can only be found within Florence's walls. Watching important looking men in finely tailored suits gorging what was described as a medieval hamburger puts a smile on my face. In the home of chic style, Cavalli and Gucci, fine wine, commerce, and modern hotels, rusticity still trumps everything when it comes to food.

If Alaska is the pinnacle of nature's beauty, then Florence could be considered the pinnacle of man-made beauty. Bells and bridges and stone and stucco; libations and liver, piazze and ponti.
Cathedrals litter every corner, and they scream of magnificence and fulfillment. Each church attracts its own crowd. The Duomo--the ecclesiastical. Santo Spirito--the Bohemian. Santa Croce--the sophisticated. San Lorenzo--the scholarly. They all offer the traveler a different feel, a different look.

Statues of great men from long ago watch your every step. They stare at you, as you stare back at them. They're stoic and intimidating, and they make you question your own existence. Am I doing everything I could be doing? Am I contributing to my world? Florence is a tough place to think highly of yourself. Especially when you're standing in the shadow of men who thought higher.

Monday, November 9, 2009

People of The World

Dawn in Prague is a good time to relax in a Square.


Admiring the New Year's Day fireworks in Rome while perched up high.

Wanderlust: Seville


A perfect example of Arabic influence in a western city.

Food is all-important in a city that loves tapas. Here, ham reigns--and hangs--supreme.



Getting lost in a maze of bushes, trees, flowers, and fountains is a good thing.

Wanderlust: Seville

Shade and a fan will be your best friends in Summer.

Tiles decorate many buildings throughout the city.

Seville is home to one of the largest medieval Gothic cathedrals.

The fierce sun sets late, casting long and lazy shadows throughout the city.

The attention to detail in the architecture is remarkable.



Seville: The Tale Of Two Cities

Seville is a convergent city. It is the result of a cataclysmic clash of eastern and western cultures. At times, the city is ambivalent, vacillating between two worlds. Seville is both Spanish and Moorish, both Muslim and Christian, and the footprint of each culture is left--sometimes shallow, other times deep--in the city's architecture, gastronomy, art, and even the faces of of its inhabitants. It is one of those rare cities that is uniquely two things at once. One has the feeling that it takes two distinct lenses to view this single city. The challenge of viewing Seville is to see it as a whole, without compromising its individual parts.

Though Madrid and Barcelona often monopolize much of the country's tourism, Seville is a city that should not be overlooked. It's romantic, sexy, historic, and influential. This is where tapas are gorged, where Flamenco is adored, and where nights are wasted away drinking and conversing. Seville is more than just the capital of Andalusia--it is a capital of culture, a capital of beauty. This is evident in a perfectly crafted plate of ox tail, in the Moorish eyes of a woman assuaging the heat with a fan, or the tormented voice of a Sevillanas singer.

To truly appreciate Seville, one need only to wander the streets aimlessly, only occasionally seeking refuge from the heat in intricately and immaculately tiled buildings. The tiles, inspired by Arabic culture, cool the body as well as the eyes. It is also very necessary to admire the people. They're beautiful, and dark, and fluid in their movements. The women are wildly alluring. The men, intriguing. Even the children--either eating sophisticated food or playing happily on stoney streets--are a pleasure to watch. Only content and satisfied children can play so freely without toys and electronics.

In a city where Gothic spires of Catholic cathedrals cast lazy shadows on the facades of Moorish buildings, one can feel overwhelmed with all that must be seen. Take a deep breath. Relax. Sip your sherry and put up your feet. Have a long, hard look around you. Seville is a tale of two cities, and in the beginning, it will take two lenses to appreciate it. But, once you learn to see the city as a whole, you'll see it through the lens of a monocle--and all its beauty will be singular.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

People of The World

Soccer matches are a place to both root for your team and voice your political opinion. Siena-Inter Milan in Siena, Italy.

Standing at the edge of Corsica.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Wanderlust: Venice

In no major city will you find a quieter nighttime atmosphere. The silence, apart from the ceaseless sloshing of water on stone, is beguiling.

Even adults have their fun with the rat-birds.


This is one of my favorite photos of both Venice and modern culture. Even in a setting as other-worldly and enchanting as this, you can still find McDonald's.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Wanderlust: Venice

The ubiquitous gondolier.

Children of all nationalities agree on one thing when visiting Venice: playing with pigeons is all the rage.





The Grand Canal is exactly what people say it is. It's a canal, and it's grand.



Venice: Unique And Alone

Venice is a city characterized by descriptions. It is probably the most written-about city on the planet, and, as a result, travelers will never be able to write anything original about the crowning jewel of the Italian peninsula. People the world over are in love with this city; but venice is rarely in love with people.

It's antiquated; it's palatial; it's romantic; it's dreary; it's lazy. If Venice were a person, it would probably be demure--even indifferent, avoiding the incessant questions about its illustrious past and whorish present. It has enchanted and confounded travelers and locals alike for centuries, and with every inch the city sinks, the more its mystique will rise.

When you step away and consider Venice objectively, you realize that, outside of admiring the city itself, there isn't much to do. Compared to other cities in Italy, the food isn't great, the museums and churches aren't exactly famous, the locals are hard to find, and the nightlife is almost nonexistent. So, how are we entertained? Is it the bliss that comes from inhaling pasta decorated with squid-ink? Is it the grandeur of the Doge's Palace and St. Mark's Square? Is it that the few locals we do see amaze us by being astoundingly apathetic about the incredible city around them? Or is it that being literally the only person astir in the city after midnight--walking canals aimlessly and absorbing the ghostly qualities of a dying city alone-- beats looking for bars and clubs in Milan and Rome?

Venice is idisyncratic. If San Francisco is like Lisbon, if Berlin is like Warsaw, if Chicago is like New York, if Tokyo is like Seoul, then Venice is like Venice. The city is easy to describe, yet difficult to explain. I think it is for this reason that so many people love it. Being left speechless or incapable of explaining joy is usually a result of something good. The only thing you can do is go there yourself and let its canals whet your palate.




Wednesday, October 21, 2009

People Of The World

One of my favorite things to do while traveling is meeting and observing (surreptitiously or otherwise) the people around me. Nothing beats sitting in a piazza, park, or pub and watching the world go by. It's overwhelming how diverse this world is; and yet, at the same time, everything is eerily familiar, no matter how far away from home you are. That familiarity often starts with people. No matter where I've been, people are doing the same thing-- eating, laughing, rushing, working, biking, kissing, holding hands, relaxing, and chatting.

I will regularly post candid and not-so-candid photos of people from Portland to Prague. Their smile, eyes, posture, and style are among many things to admire. Seeing people captured in their element is definitely worth a thousand words.


One of Joyce's Dubliners.


Two old friends in Alghero, Sardegna


A trip to the local market in Reggio di Calabria will lead to a gastronomical fortune.

Wanderlust: Amsterdam

Nobody wants to acknowledge it, but pancakes are the true drug in The Netherlands.


You'll find as much entertainment on the streets of Amsterdam as you will in museums and bars. The street life is as vibrant as any.



Wanderlust: Amsterdam


Amsterdam: More Than Red Lights

Amsterdam carries a certain stigma. Words matching that stigma? Lascivious, turpitude, corruption, sinful, lecherous. We all know where these words come from. It's a city made famous for the legalization of prostitution and soft drugs. As a result, the city is often swarmed with degenerate tourists seeking a thrill--more so than, say, Paris or Seattle.

However, I feel it should be stated that Amsterdam does not entirely deserve its sinful label. Sure, you reap what you sow; but, the city has many other qualities that completely overshadow its immoral reputation (not to say I entirely disagree with their system, as it has proven to drastically reduce crime and raise capital). Of all capital cities I've visited, it is by far the quaintest, and it truly captures the essence of yesteryear.

The expansive influence the Dutch have had is blatantly obvious in the architecture. Strolling the side streets and outskirts of this charming city, one gets the feeling they're in Brooklyn. New York was, after all, known as New Amsterdam. You might also notice that the Dutch are highly educated and cultured. Men are debonair, while women are stylishly disengaged. They compose themselves with confidence--dressing well, speaking with sparkling smiles, and having the appearance that they know exactly what they like. Here you will find Rembrandt, Van Gogh, Anne Frank, and most importantly, you'll likely find yourself.

Amsterdam is international, historically significant, and entertaining for any traveler. It offers to the visitor myriad opportunities to engage the mind and excite the imagination. Everything about the city--the canals, the bikes, the skinny buildings, elfin bars, its aging charm--contribute to create a delightful locale that will surely hold your attention. If you desire the trendy, artistic, and intelligent, you'll undoubtedly find it all in this canal-locked city, drowning in savoir vivre.


The oft-dreary weather in The Netherlands is very befitting of the scenery.


Street art for the pleasure of the passer-by.



Tuesday, October 13, 2009

The First Post














Here is the first post. So, congratulations to me. This is a photographic account of my travels around the map. As of today, these photos will cover some of the journeys I have made through 11 countries and 23 states. There will be people, places, and things (yeah, mostly nouns) and should give insight not only in to the places I've been and people I've met, but also the things that interest me. Cheers.