Still stuck here in Cartagena waiting for a new switch and
for a diesel mechanic to finish replacing our corroded exhaust pipe, so we
decided another little excursion was in order. This time we just took a day
trip on the bus to Murcia, the capital city of the Murcia region of southern
Spain. After a pleasant hour cruising through farmlands and over the mountains,
we arrived just a short stroll from the centre of town for a late Spanish
breakfast of coffee and tostas. Like everywhere in Spain, you are rarely more
than 100 metres from a café, bar or restaurant, which are hard to distinguish
because they all serve coffee, beer and food at any time.
First off we headed for the Salzillo Museum, as it is only
open in the morning. Francisco Salzillo was a Spanish sculptor who lived and
worked in Murcia (then a kingdom) through most of the 18th century.
He trained as a painter, but later took up sculpture in clay and wood. He
specialised in church effigies, particularly the icons that are carried by
worshippers around the old towns on saints’ days and at Easter. Many of these
are collected here at the museum, which is also a chapel. The first display we
come upon is an extraordinary Nativity scene which is also a vignette of
Spanish village life. 556 figures include the usual shepherds, wise men with
entourage and holy family with angels, oxen and donkeys but also the local
markets with sellers of every kind of produce, bakery, fishermen, winemakers,
pottery, butcher … all beautifully painted and crafted in incredible detail.
You could spend hours looking at it, both for its beauty and the record it
provides of the clothing and customs of times past.
Moving on through the display, the life size figures of John
the Evangelist and St Veronica with the shroud of Christ appear, looking as if
they could step down off their pedestals any moment. Several of the figures on
display are dressed in sumptuous silk clothing, a product for which the local
Murcian mills were famous. Even these superb figures can’t prepare you for the
chapel, however, which contains full size effigies of the betrayal and
crucifixion designed to be carried by penitents during Easter week. With vivid
costume, and powerfully evocative gestures and facial expressions, Salzillo has
captured all the drama and emotion of the story. In times when few were
literate, these tableaux would have served to educate/ indoctrinate the
populace with the correct ideas and attitudes. It is surely no accident that
all the bad guys – supposedly Roman soldiers - look decidedly Moorish.
St Peter takes down a guard |
Amazing detail |
The museum is
designed to allow you close views of the figures, so you can see the details
such as eyelashes and lacework. Salzillo’s clay ‘sketches’ are on display,
along with drawings, embroidered church vestments and interesting things like the
glass and precious stone eyes used in the sculptures. Well worth a visit if
you’re near Murcia.
The Cathedral |
Palacio Episcopal |
Also worth seeing is the cathedral, its façade an amazing
baroque confection of saints, demons and symbolic figures; and near it
the Palacio Episcopal. The cathedral square is surrounded by pleasant shopping
and café areas, with the Placa de Flores and its restaurants close by. We
walked down to the river Segura with its avenue of trees and variety of
bridges, then back to the station via some of the city’s public gardens. Well worth spending a day in town.
Segura River |
No comments:
Post a Comment