Friday, May 15, 2009

We're Missing the Chile #10

In which we continue our recounting of little cp's adventures in Argentina. Sites seen in Buenos Aires:
1. La Boca - Little cp's favorite part! Colourful buildings, restaurants with live tango dancers, musicians playing sambas in the streets...What's not to like? Some musicians just walked into the restaurant little cp was eating at and started playing! Then some customers started dancing! Good times! Also, saw some street dancers doing national dances and walked along the Calle Caminito.

Scenes from La Boca:


2. La Recoleta Cemetery - Interesting and large cemetery in upscale district. Click here for a walk through. Some of the tombs had been broken into. One had a cat living in it! Mostly famous for being the final resting place of Eva Peron.

Historical Note: The life of the much loved, much popularized Eva Peron is interesting and fraught with political and personal strife, but I'm not going to talk about that because we're talking about the cemetery (focus people!). More appropriate to the topic at hand is the crazy story of what happened to her after she died. After her death in 1952, the corpse was embalmed and put on display at the headquarters of the General Confederation of Labor (many thousands of admirers would come from far and wide to see her, light candles, hold vigils, and other fun Catholic things). It was due to the meticulousnes of her embalmer, Pedro Ara, that the body managed to stay in such pristine condition, potentially forever (he even preserved the body with all its internal organs, which are normally removed). Apparently he was going for Lenin-quality preservation...it took him a year to accomplish. Anyway in 1955, the military leaders who overthrew Juan Peron confiscated Eva Peron's corpse because they were afraid that the opposition would use the body to rally the populace. Since the body was such a powerful symbol (for the nation's poor especially) they couldn't just destroy it or they would risk massive repercussions. So they tried to hide it, but they were never able to keep it totally hidden/secret from locals, who would bring flowers and other offerings. This was in spite of trying to trick people by employing multiple wax replicas of the body that Pedro Ara had made. One story goes that, after many stays in various and sundry military installations in Buenos Aires, the body was taken to the house of an army major who stored it in his attic. But (and this goes to the legend of Eva's haunting of Argentina/her corpse/her resting place), the major mysteriously shot his wife and so the body had to be moved again. The military decided to send the body to a secret site in Italy where it was buried under the name "Maggi"(this was in '57). Juan, who had been exiled to Spain, managed to recover it in 1971 in exchange for granting his blessing to the new Argentinian regime of the day. He stored it in an open casket in his house! Far from being weirded out by this, his then wife Isabel performed daily devotions and even combed it's hair. Peron was re-elected in 1974 but promptly died and Isabel went back to Argentina to succeed him as president and brought Eva with her (persumably to lend support to her presidency). The body stayed at the presidential estate until 1976 (when Mrs. Peron was overthrown) when it was finally buried in the Duarte (Eva's maiden name) family tomb in the Recoleta Cemetery. She lies in a glass case 6 metres underground, surrounded by bank vault-esque steel plates. Whew!

3. Casa Rosada - President's house. Pink-coloured because mixed white and red (the conservative and liberal colours).

4. Obelisco - The Obelisk of Buenos Aires, built in 1936 to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the city's founding.
Fun things to do with your Obelisk:
-acrobatic highwire acts
-hang signs geared at silencing the masses
-celebrate football wins
-put a giant pink condom on it
-dress it up like a pencil in remembrance of la Noche de los Lápices.

5. Floralis Generica - giant metal sculpture of a flower made by architect Eduardo Catalano in 2002. It is 23 metres tall and has a mechanism inside that opens the 6 petals in the morning and closes them at night. Cool! It is located in the Plaza Naciones Unidas (behind El Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes).

6. El Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes - The National Fine Arts Museum houses some of the most important art pieces in South America. Showcases important pre-20th Century works from all over the world (and the occasional contemporary artist). I don't know much about art but they have a Monet that I recognize from that Monet coffee table book my parents have. I dunno, you could spend days there looking! Also the building has an interesting history...

7. Museo Nacional de Arte Decorativo - Spitting distance from #5 and #6. Cool museum with a grab bag of fancy pants decorative art from furniture to porcelain housed in what was once one of the country’s grandest single-family homes in the early 20th century.

Personal observations:
-So many plazas! San Martin (of course), Chile, Uruguay, Francia, Republica, etc. Also there are so many museums in Buenos Aires! Too many things to see in a day! Sensory overload!
-Saw a local dance troupe doing capoeira. Neat.
-Buenos Aires has amazing ice cream!
-The wealth disparity in the city is clearly evident in it's slums with hole-ridden buildings and people begging for change to live. Upsetting and makes you appreciate how much we have in Canada.

FYI: Italian connections:
Did you know that Argentina has a significant Italian/Italian ancestry population? It's true! Italians formed a significant portion of the immigrant population to Argentina since the late 1870s (although the flow has stemmed in since the 1960s). Many features of Italian culture have permeated Argentinian culture such as customs and food (resulting in the many many Italian inspired, Argentinian fusion restaurants). If Wikipedia is to be believed, Argentina has 1.5 million Italian speakers and 60% of Argentinians have some sort of Italian ancestry. Hmmm...coincidence that little cp like this place so much?

p.s. Check the detailed map below and see if you can find the places mentioned (click to embiggen).

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Oh, this info is really useful for me, i wrote down almost everything you mentioned in the post, i'm traveling to argentina really soon so i'm getting all the info i can get. I'm also looking for an Apartment for rent in Buenos Aires for the time i'm going to stay there, heard palermo is a good neighborhood to stay, is that correct ?

 
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