Postcard from Lisboa, Portugal: Billionaire Berardo shares a wealth of art

Anyone who has got power or a bit of money should contribute to the preservation of culture.

Jose Berardo, “In Lisbon, Sowing the Seeds of Culture,” Seth Sherwood, The New York Times, February 18, 2011

Born in Madeira, Jose Berardo has a “gold finger.” The self-made billionaire started out diving into all-night club scenes in South Africa before settling down to make his fortune through trading in gold, diamonds, paper, finance and almost everything else he touched.

His wealth fueled his urge to collect compulsively. And a portion of the results can be seen at the Berardo Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Belen Cultural Center. A rarity: entry to the collection is admission-free.

The placement of the huge Belen Cultural Center, built in 1992 to host Portugal’s term as head of the European Union, was controversial. The massive modern structure shares the same sweeping plaza as the ancient Church and Monastery of Jeronimos. But the plaza is enormous, and great care was taken to preserve the viewshed of the landmark. And, unlike San Antonio’s slow process in the reuse of HemisFair, the calendar of the Cultural Center is packed with theatrical, musical and art events.

So here goes another download overload of postdated postcards from Lisboa.

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Postcard from Lisboa, Portugal: Street Art

Inartistic graffiti scrawled on walls plagues most urban centers, and Lisboa is no exception. But Lisboa also has an abundance of interesting street art, some volunteer and others authorized through a program called Galeria de Arte Urbana.

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For some reason, I take comfort in the words “Every idiot should serve a purpose.” Hey, I try.

To see urban art from other cities featured on this blog, click here.

July 26, 2013, Update: Street-art photographer Stephen Kelley explores Lisbon for Huffington Post.

 

Postcard from Lisboa, Portugal*: Scouring the Skyline

Lisboa’s layers flow over hills and dales, providing numerous high vantage points with spectacular overlooks.

Of course, one has to scale them. But the views are so worth it.

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Gazing out over the red tile rooftops made me extra-sad subsequent owners removed the old (okay, maybe leaky) tiles on the roof of our former house in Olmos Park.

* Remember in the old days how you would be home from Europe for about a month before people would finally begin receiving your postcards in the mail? Several of the upcoming posts on this blog will be reminiscent of that slow delivery system.