#atienza-maure

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Madrid food
fromThe Globe and Mail
2 days ago

For sale: Entire Spanish villages, great selection, definitely fixer-uppers

Foreigners are revitalizing abandoned towns in Spain, Portugal, and Italy, transforming them into vibrant communities and tourist destinations.
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

Valeria Luiselli Reads Julio Cortazar

Valeria Luiselli, an acclaimed author, discusses the intricacies of Julio Cortázar's 'The Night Face Up,' highlighting its themes and narrative structure that intertwine reality and dreams.
Books
Arts
fromHyperallergic
6 days ago

Juan Usle's Childhood Shipwrecks

Juan Uslé's retrospective at Museo Reina Sofía showcases his evolution from a traumatic childhood memory to a vibrant artistic career.
Music production
fromKALTBLUT Magazine
1 week ago

Anna Ferrer Transforms Tradition in Enchanting New Video: Los panes los hijos - KALTBLUT Magazine

Anna Ferrer's fourth album, PA, intertwines her family's bakery heritage with experimental folk music, creating a unique sonic experience.
Madrid food
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Stop brunch! How a rustic Catalan meal is taking the fight to bland food and overtourism | Abbas Asaria

Brunch in gentrifying cities symbolizes overtourism and erodes local culture, leading to protests against generic cafes and rising rents.
fromThe Nation
1 week ago

In "Bomarzo," the Renaissance Man is a Monster

"One must put himself in the period... crime had a certain familiarity from its repetition through time.... That's what they were like, unscrupulous. So was I. And since we are speaking about it, so was the Renaissance."
History
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

On Passover, some Sephardic Jews revisit not only the story of their ancestors, but also their Ladino language

During Passover, Jewish families gather at their tables to retell a story passed down for thousands of years, recounting the Exodus, the biblical story of the Israelites' liberation from slavery in Egypt.
Philosophy
#spain
Berlin
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

Pedro Almodovar: My modesty has crumbled. Now I feel more naked'

Pedro Almodovar expresses mixed feelings about his latest film, Amarga Navidad, revealing personal exposure and positive initial reactions.
Madrid food
fromwww.businessinsider.com
4 days ago

When I turned 40, my wife and I took a hard look at our lives in the US. Then, we decided to move our family to Spain.

Turning 40 prompted a family move to Alicante, Spain for a better quality of life and a slower pace amidst rising costs in the US.
fromFast Company
2 weeks ago

A city in Southern Spain holds an ancient secret to fighting extreme heat

We have deployed several types of cooling systems here, each one used depending on climatic conditions. The system, created millennia ago but updated for the 21st century, works by cooling water underground in the naturally low temperatures at night. To cool water more quickly, some is also sent to the roof via solar-powered pumps and sprayed out of nozzles in a thin layer through a method known as a falling film, before draining back down underground.
OMG science
Design
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
2 weeks ago

with a pavilion crafted through collective embroidery, izaskun chinchilla tests urban utopia

Utopian thinking emerges through small-scale collective craft practices like embroidery rather than ambitious masterplans, creating tangible contributions to better communities.
fromwww.archdaily.com
2 weeks ago

Poetry Anthology of Light / P.M.A.Studio

This project involved the reconstruction of a dilapidated building located in Guangzhou's old town along Tongfu Xi Road, a historic street established in 1926. Once vibrant, this area has suffered from significant neglect over the years, with many buildings falling into disrepair, creating safety hazards that forced both residents and businesses to leave.
Renovation
Film
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 weeks ago

Insult or adaptation? Why films still struggle to adapt novels

Film adaptations of literature often transform source material through cinematic techniques, sometimes sacrificing literary depth for visual spectacle and narrative restructuring.
Miscellaneous
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 weeks ago

Elmer Mendoza: The situation in Sinaloa is not a reason to feel sad or hopeless'

Elmer Mendoza's new novel 'The Mermaid and the Retiree' shifts focus from his detective Zurdo Mendieta to explore Mexican politics, violence, and machismo through a strong female protagonist from the mountains.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
3 weeks ago

The Last Days of Franco

Montserrat Roig's The Time of Cherries captures pre-democratic Barcelona through the story of Natàlia, a former activist confronting unfinished personal and political business in a repressive atmosphere.
Madrid food
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

Orson Welles' love affair with Spain's Castilla y Leon region

Orson Welles expressed a deep, inexplicable affection for Avila, Spain, despite only living there briefly while filming Chimes at Midnight.
#picasso
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 weeks ago

Furious row erupts over Madrid site of one of Robert Capa's most important pictures

Madrid's conservative city council abandoned plans for a Robert Capa museum at a historically significant bombing site, instead converting it into a youth center with minimal historical commemoration.
Madrid food
fromwww.nytimes.com
2 weeks ago

Madrid Travel Guide: What to Do, Eat and Where to Stay

Madrid has transformed from a transit hub into a major European destination and Latin American expat capital, offering world-class museums, diverse neighborhoods, and exceptional culinary experiences.
Madrid food
fromQueerty
2 weeks ago

WATCH: An older man's cruising vacation hits a stroke of bad luck in this Spanish dramedy - Queerty

Maspalomas follows a 76-year-old gay man's transformative journey from carefree vacation hedonism to life-altering stroke and recovery in a nursing home.
fromwww.thelocal.es
1 month ago

Where to travel in Spain to see the solar eclipse this summer

A total solar eclipse happens when the Moon passes directly between the Sun and Earth, perfectly aligning to completely obscure the Sun, casting a dark shadow across the Earth. The event may be around five months away, but many are already planning their trips and accommodation is booking up fast.
Travel
#portuguese-literature
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
22 years ago

It's Spanish, reinterpreted

A 1923 Spanish-style Brentwood home designed by architect John Byers reveals intimate, elegantly layered spaces combining modern and ancient elements across nine thousand square feet.
Parenting
fromwww.thelocal.es
1 year ago

The 'strange' things Spanish parents do raising their children

Spain's family-oriented culture includes distinctive parenting practices like infant ear piercing and flexible bedtimes that differ significantly from northern European child-rearing traditions.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 month ago

New Medieval Books: The Taifa Kingdoms - Medievalists.net

The eleventh-century collapse of the Umayyad caliphate fragmented al-Andalus into rival taifa kingdoms, initiating the centuries-long process that ended Islamic rule in Iberia by 1492.
Madrid food
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 weeks ago

The impious and sodomite' Portuguese nobleman who kept banned books inside the walls of his house in a Spanish village

A 1992 discovery of 11 sixteenth-century books hidden in a Spanish home belonged to Portuguese nobleman Fernao Brandao, who fled the Inquisition due to his sexual orientation.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Spain to formally pardon 53 women incarcerated by Franco regime

The board, which had echoes of Ireland's notorious Magdalene laundries, was overseen by Carmen Polo, the wife of the dictator Gen Francisco Franco. Originally founded in 1902 to stamp out sex work, in 1941, two years after the end of the Spanish civil war, its role was extended to clamp down on female behaviour that deviated from norms laid down by the Catholic church.
Madrid food
Madrid food
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 weeks ago

No fairytale ending for the rebel nuns of Belorado: Spanish sisters quit the fight and leave their convent

Rebel Poor Clare nuns in Spain will voluntarily surrender their monastery keys on March 12 rather than face a public eviction, ending their two-year occupation following their 2014 split from the Roman Catholic Church.
Travel
fromElite Traveler
1 month ago

A Guide to Agrotourism in Rural Spain

Spain's rural regions offer immersive agrotourism experiences combining hands-on farm activities, local food and wine, and traditional country accommodations.
Miscellaneous
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Spanish author lambasts linguistic academy over social media influence

The Spanish Royal Academy is ignoring professional writers and yielding to social media influence, undermining language standards and the notion of correctness.
Food & drink
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Spanish jamon is the best ham in the world but culture warriors are reviving its dark history | Abbas Asaria

Spain produces world-class ham and a rich variety of regional pork dishes, notably jamon iberico and diverse morcillas with deep cultural significance.
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Between Materials and Memory: Three Madrid Architecture Practices on Heritage Rehabilitation

Ba-rro: "Our starting point is always the context and what already exists." We are interested in recognizing the value of things simply because they are there, without assuming that everything must be preserved as a matter of principle. The question isn't what can be kept, but what deserves to be kept in each specific project. The decision to preserve, reveal, or remove doesn't stem from universal values or a nostalgic impulse, but from a situated interpretation:
Renovation
Madrid food
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Goya's last mystery is called Rosario Weiss

Goya's Black Paintings inspired Sergio del Molino's book exploring the artist's legacy through the story of Rosario Weiss, the daughter of Leocadia Zorrilla who became Goya's student and artistic heir.
US politics
fromABC7 San Francisco
1 month ago

Santa Clara Co. poet laureate pens 'love letter' about immigrants facing threat of deportation

A play, No Llegamos Aquí Solos, portrays undocumented community balancing activism and everyday joy, drawing on a DACA poet's experience caring for his grandmother.
Writing
fromMission Local
2 months ago

Abuelitas de la Mision: Maria Alicia Catalan, a poet who's lived in the Mission 55 years

María Alicia Catalán, a Salvadoran immigrant, built a lifelong caregiving career in San Francisco, remains active at 87, and expresses herself through poetry and music.
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

From pajamas and the chamber pot' to the coffee nap': In search of the perfect siesta

Humans have a predisposition to experience a drop in alertness and vigilance around midday, between six and eight hours after waking up. In fact, the word siesta comes from the Latin sexta, which in Ancient Rome referred to the sixth hour of the day from dawn; a time reserved for rest and relaxation. There are many markers we measure in the laboratory which indicate that this period is present, even without having eaten lunch, he states.
Public health
#blackface
Science
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

Spanish tops a "happiest language" ranking-and linguists have thoughts - Silicon Canals

Spanish ranks among the languages with the most positive average word valence according to large-scale native-speaker ratings of common words across text sources.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 month ago

Spain captures bronze toddlers capturing partridges

Dating to the 1st-2nd century A.D., the bronzes are about 20 inches long and mounted to rectangular bases. They capture the little girls in dynamic movement, frozen in the act of propelling themselves forward, their fingers splayed wide on each side of the partridges just about to catch them. The craftsmanship is superior, every detail on the toddlers and partridges realistically depicted with fine materials. The eyes are inlaid with white stones and one of the girls still has her metal irises.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Madrid museum shuffles its pack charting decades of rapid change in Spain

The Reina Sofia's new rehang opens, quite pointedly, with a painting of a detained man sitting, head bowed and wrists shackled, as he waits for the arbitrary hand of institutional bureaucracy to decide his fate. The picture, Document No , was painted by Juan Genoves in 1975, the year Francisco Franco died and Spain began its transition to democracy after four decades of dictatorship.
Miscellaneous
US politics
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Welcome to the calenton': no nation speaks and thinks in a single language

Different languages enrich countries rather than weaken them, opposing xenophobic claims that a strong state must have a single national language.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Georgi Gospodinov: Jorge Luis Borges gave me an exhilarating sense of freedom'

Early reading fostered a lifelong devotion to books and writing, shaped by adventure, criminology, eroticism, Salinger, Borges, and Bulgarian poets.
Design
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
2 months ago

luca poian plans transit history museum in madrid with lightweight, inflatable facade

A translucent-ETFE-clad EMT Museum on the former Vicente Calderón site will celebrate Madrid's transit history with adaptable industrial-inspired spaces and civic-focused public programming.
#poetry
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Los Saldos review prodigal big-city son reconnects with his heritage in rural Spain

A documentary portrays a farming family's struggle against industrial change, as the filmmaker reconnects with rural heritage through work, storytelling, and observing community decline.
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
1 month ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Going to CAN Art Fair Madrid

UVNT Art Fair (Urvanity Art) and CAN Art Fair are merging into CAN Art Fair Madrid (Contemporary Art Now), unifying Madrid and Ibiza editions under one brand.
#prado-museum
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

Spain's Cosmic Mother of Modernism

MADRID - The most famous portrait of Maruja Mallo depicts the artist covered from head to toe in seaweed. She is crowned and draped with long, rope-like strands of kelp, her arms raised triumphantly like an all-powerful marine goddess. This unconventional photograph, snapped in 1945 by the poet Pablo Neruda on a Chilean beach, was no doubt carefully orchestrated by the Spanish artist, who viewed herself as an extension of her unique work, where female energy is a conduit for natural and even cosmic forces.
Arts
Film
fromMission Local
2 months ago

S.F. poet Alejandro Murguia stars in new documentary, and the Mission gets its close-up

Keeper of the Fire documents Alejandro Murguía and the Mission District's cultural, poetic resistance to anti-immigrant rhetoric and efforts to impose a single national culture.
Books
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 months ago

The lost lessons of Jorge Luis Borges: His English and American literature classes

Recovered 1966 lectures by Jorge Luis Borges were published, revealing lost oral work and previously uncollected material through meticulous editorial recovery.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 month ago

New Medieval Books: A Medieval Case for Islam's Superiority - Medievalists.net

An eighth-century Abbasid letter to the Byzantine emperor defends Islam, critiques Christian misunderstandings, and reflects Abbasid-Byzantine diplomacy and Baghdad's intellectual life.
fromColossal
2 months ago

Absurd Scenarios Stretch Across Paco Pomet's Uncanny Canvases

From figures with multiple legs and noodles for arms to frolicking trees, Paco Pomet summons the absurd. Known for his uncanny oil paintings rendered mostly in monochrome and enlivened by colorful details of overly stretchy limbs or celestial objects, a sense of nostalgia greets surreal scenarios. The artist often derives his imagery from vintage black-and-white photographs, adding an absurd dimension to history.
Arts
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Valeria Luiselli on Sound, Memory, and New Beginnings

Field recordings and attentive listening are integral to narrative creation, shaping the writing process and immersive listening experiences.
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
2 months ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Preview: Imon Boy's "Un poco distraido" @ Yusto / Giner Gallery, Madrid

Imon Boy's solo exhibition transforms diary-like, graffiti-rooted imagery into playful visual narratives blending street energy with gaming, internet culture, cinema, travel, humor and identity.
Miscellaneous
fromwww.thelocal.es
2 months ago

PM hails Spain's immigration approach as model for Europe to follow

Spain's pro-immigration policy has driven economic growth, strengthened social security revenues, and reduced irregular arrivals while cooperating to curb smuggling.
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
2 months ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Carla Fuentes "The Drivers" @ RIO & MENAKA, Madrid

Family craftsmanship and car nostalgia inspire oil portraits that crop vehicle geometries, preserve lost color, and capture journeys, memories, and personal transformation.
Arts
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 months ago

Madrid named world's best city for street art for its 425 masterpieces'

Murfin's 'Ninos Perdidos I' in Fuenlabrada won third place in the Best of 2025 Street Art Awards; Madrid named world's top street art city.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Most Indians don't read for pleasure so why does the country have 100 literature festivals?

Sounding amused, publisher Pramod Kapoor recalls the reaction of the Indian cricketing legend Bishen Singh Bedi when he learned Kapoor was printing 3,000 copies of his autobiography. Only 3,000? he protested. I fill stadiums with 50-60,000 people coming to see me play and you think that's all my book is going to sell? Kapoor, the founder of Roli Books, explains that Bedi's legions of admirers were unlikely to translate into book buyers. That was in 2021.
Books
Miscellaneous
fromwww.thelocal.es
1 month ago

Inside Spain: End of supermarket small talk and Alicante housing scandal

Mercadona trials pre-cut, pre-packaged counters (T9), signaling automation and reduced social interaction; Alicante low-income housing is being bought by the city's elite.
fromArtnet News
2 months ago

Spanish Dealers Strike Over 21% Tax on Art-and More Art Industry News

- Outsider Art Fair has announced 68 exhibitors for its 34th edition at Manhattan's Metropolitan Pavilion this March 19-22. First-timers include Gagné Contemporary (Toronto), Embajada (San Juan), and Nanjing Outsider Art Center. - A long-lost Renaissance portrait has resurfaced at the Winter Show at New York's Park Avenue Armory. The portrait of a preacher by Sofonisba Anguissola can be found on the booth of Old Master dealer Robert Simon. ( Artnet News)
Arts
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

"Predictions and Presentiments"

Mother and daughter arrive on an island to begin again, observe a yawning sky, local winds, Etna's ash, and read the Levante as an omen.
Miscellaneous
fromThe Nation
2 months ago

How Immigration Transformed Europe's Most Conservative Capital

Madrid's Latin American-born population has surged to over one million, forming about 15% of the region's population and reshaping the city's neighborhoods and culture.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Monkey Christ' is as good as a Picasso | Brief letters

I was intrigued by the similarity between two paintings recently featured in the Guardian: the Ecce Homo as restored by Cecilia Gimenez (Cecilia Gimenez, famed for Monkey Christ' mural mishap, dies at 94, 30 December) and Tete de Femme by Pablo Picasso (1m Picasso portrait up for grabs for 100 in charity raffle, 31 December). Perhaps Cecilia's work is in need of a reappraisal. Steve Shearsmith Beverley, East Yorkshire
Arts
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