Milan for Easter, an excellent decision. My friend Bridget and I flew from Paris to Milan on Friday and despite an 8 hour delay leaving from Charles De Gaulle the weekend was lovely. Italy was fabulous and a country I must return to someday. I was pleasantly surprised by the generally friendliness of Italians and how easy it was to understand some Italian and pick up a few phrases while I was there. Also, most likely due to Milan's proximity to Switzerland, I didn't find the culture overwhelmingly different from France.
Milan is where Hemingway based his novel A Farewell to Arms and I loved walking around picturing where the hospital might have been and all the roads his characters wondered down.
Bridget and I knew very little about Milan, the Lakes, or really what we were going to do once in Italy, but that added adventure to the trip and I think we managed just fine.
I, of course, drank lots of Italian coffee.
On Sunday we went to visit Lake Como, renowned as the most beautiful lake that borders Italy and Switzerland. Despite the gray skies it was absolutely beautiful.
Gelato!
Milan is currently one of the fashion capitals of the world along side Paris, London, and New York. Bridget and I strolled down several of the main shopping streets, but only window shopped.
Leonardo Da Vinci. We went to one museum in Milan featuring Italian art from the 15th-17th centuries. Lots of Luinis, Brezins, and Raphaels. A nice surprise was seeing Raphael's original sketch of his "School of Athens." The museum was having a special Leonardo exhibit and we saw his self-portrait and as well his painting of "the musician." Then we were given free tickets to go see the small exhibit of his sketches/thoughts. It was amazing to see what all that man thought. One piece of his journal had some sketches and then text that dealt with the flights of birds and the problems of painting.
There was a huge Easter egg with the four seasons painted on it.
Bridget and I on top of the roof of the main cathedral, Duomo.
The view from the roof was amazing, but even more incredible was seeing the architecture's miniscule details. Bridget and I spent over an hour on the roof just in awe of this.
The Doumo.
Well that's all for now, prego.
Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteThis probably makes me kind of uncultured, but I really am envying that cup of coffee and that dress... ;)
I have actually been there! My reaction to the Doumo was - no joke - "That is the pointiest building I have ever seen!" Ha ha
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