A visit to Antoni Gaudi’s modernism wonders in Barcelona
A view of the rooftop of Barcelona’s Casa Vicens, designed by Spanish architect Antoni Gaudi.
(Luis Gene / AFP/Getty Images)Casa Vicens, with its facade of red bricks and green-and-white tiles in orderly checkerboard patterns, launched Antoni Gaudi’s career.
(Lluis Gene / AFP/Getty Images)Barcelona’s Casa Vicens is newly opened to the public.
(Lluis Gene / AFP/Getty Images)Inside the colorful Casa Vicens by Spanish architect Antoni Gaudi.
(Lluis Gene / AFP/Getty Images )On the rooftop of Casa Vicens in Barcelona.
(LLUIS GENE / AFP/Getty Images)Casa Vicens was one of the first buildings to launch the modernisme movement in Catalonia and Europe.
(LLUIS GENE / AFP/Getty Images)Staring up at the ceiling of Casa Vicens.
(Lluis Gene / AFP/Getty Images)A fountain and a bench inside Casa Vicens.
(Lluis Gene / AFP/Getty Images)Tourists take in Barcelona’s Casa Batllo, designed by Catalan architect Antoni Gaudi.
(Sean Gallup / Getty Images )Barcelona’s Casa Mila or “Pedrera” (the stone quarry) is a modernist building by architect Antoni Gaudi.
(Josep Lago / AFP/Getty Images)Antoni Gaudi designed Casa Mila or “Pedrera” (the stone quarry) in Barcelona.
(Josep Lago / AFP/Getty Images)Antoni Gaudi’s Park Guell in Barcelona, built from 1900 to 1914.
(Cesar Rangel / AFP/Getty Images)On the roof of Antoni Gaudi’s “La Pedrera” or Casa Mila in Barcelona.
(David Ramos / Getty Images)Antoni Gaudi’s “La Pedrera” or Casa Mila was his last civil work.
(David Ramos / Getty Images)People gather outside Casa Mila in Barcelona.
(Pau Barrena / AFP/Getty Images)Sagrada Familia is Antoni Gaudi’s crowning achievement. He took over as the church’s chief architect in 1883.
(Jorge Guerrero / AFP/Getty Images )In 1926 Antoni Gaudi when he was laid to rest in the crypt of Sagrada Familia.
(Dan Kitwood / Getty Images)The Sagrada Familia is the most popular tourist destination in Barcelona.
(Javier Soriano / AFP/Getty Images)