The Amalfi Coast
Wednesday, January 2, 2019
The Amalfi Coast
Yesterday, on New Year’s
Day, we spent the morning at the Museo Bottega della Tarsia Lignea, a museum
devoted to inlaid wood art. It was
astonishing! (see http://www.comune.sorrento.na.it/pagina845_museo-bottega-della-tarsia-lignea.html
)
This is a labor of love
for an architect who became enamored with this form of art, which is widely
practiced here. He has assembled a
collection of the finest examples, which fill a three-story villa in the center
of Sorrento. He led us on a private
tour, and the items in this collection are incredibly beautiful. Both the art and the craft are
extraordinary. Highly recommended. No photos allowed, unfortunately.
We spent the rest of the
day wandering the city and shopping (yes, many shops are open on New Year’s
Day). A lovely dinner and to bed.
Today we drove and boated
the Amalfi coast, visiting three of the towns there. The coast is very reminiscent of northern
California:
But the two-lane road,
with many hairpin turns and multiple switchbacks, is not quite the same as US
101. It’s 1 ½ lanes wide:
The drive may be scarier
than going south on 101! Our first stop
was at Positano, a lovely small village on the coast:
The Santa Maria Assonta
Church there holds a “Black Madonna,” the story of which I did not
research. We’ve seen another Black
Madonna in Czestochowa, Poland. Here’s
the Positano church:
The organ has horizontal
trumpet pipes:
Our leader hired this boat
to take us along the coast to the town of Amalfi:
We passed beautiful small
villages, such as Praiano:
There are fjords along the
coast:
And there are caves, big
and small:
We docked in the village
of Amalfi:
There’s an unusual
fountain in the town square:
Our guide said the church
is in “Norman Arabic” style. This needs
more research:
The interior is beautiful:
And there is a lovely
cloister:
The church museum has
wonderful treasures including this 13th c. St. Andrew:
We had lunch in Amalfi,
and then drove to a small gem of a town, Ravello, where there is a spectacular
villa, The Villa Rufalo, with gardens overlooking the view:
We drove back along the
same terrifying road, and had dinner in Sorrento. Tomorrow will be our last day; home on
Friday.
These memories with phenomenal pictures are so fabulous for me to see. Do I see a similar fountain in future on your patio. What a neighborhood attraction! Another house and garden tour?
ReplyDeleteThank you, but who wrote this? "Unknown"?
DeleteThat statue of St. Andrew is wonderful! Reminds me of some works by 20th-century sculptors, e.g., Barlach.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to see at least a low stone wall along the twisting road. But that wouldn't have been enough to make ME comfortable!