Things to in Madrid

A trip to Madrid was long overdue for me. Spain’s capital city is warm and welcoming, and it is the perfect destination for a weekend break. One can wander through narrow cobbled streets to discover atmospheric squares and awe-inspiring architecture. Then there is the endless culture: unrivalled art collections, imaginative independent boutiques, busy bars and tasty traditional tapas cafes. I hope my list below features something for everyone, from stadium tours for footy fanatics to cool nail bars for manicure dependents – Madrid certainly has more to offer than first meets the eye.

TO SLEEP

Hotel Villa Magna – this 150 room 5* hotel has always been a favourite amongst the luxury options in the city. I personally vouch for their sheets which I’m sure are the softest in Madrid.

TO EAT

El Club Allard – a gastronomic adventure, this two Michelin-starred restaurant will ignite your imagination and delight your senses with creative and delicious food.

Estado Puro – with the same proprietors as the two Michelin-starred La Terreza del Casino, this quicker and cheaper alternative offers delicious tapas-style dishes and the best orange juice in town.

Zalacain – a gloriously traditional dining room serving Michelin star Spanish specialities.

The Ritz – a delightful and palatial property, the perfect place for afternoon tea although I would recommend the local alternative of churros and chocolate.

Mercado de San Miguel – an exciting covered food market. Open until 2am at the weekends – grab a glass of local wine or appropriately named San Miguel beer and wander around picking up bite size delicacies.

Chocolateria San Gines – Churros heaven. This institution is open 24 hours a day for hungry passers-by and is always full to the brim.

TO DRINK

Le Cabrera – a de luxe gastro-bar with cocktails in the basement.

Toma Cafe – This chic and cool coffee bar serves exemplary hot drinks. Order a Cortado to go and sip it while you wander through the streets.

Dry by Javier De Las Muelas – the seventh bar by this cocktail magician. You won’t find a better Martini anywhere else, though I preferred the fruitier options!

La Bicicleta – full of young locals this cafe serves up fine coffee and cake. Always crowded with creative people chatting away.

TO SEE

Miro at Palacio de Congreso – it is not difficult to spot a Miro, the colourful cursive drawings are quite unique. Here you will see a huge ceramic design that will make you stop and stare.

Museo ABC – This outlandish contemporary building exhibits an illustrated retrospective of over a century of Spanish history.

Reina Sofia – many come just to see Picasso’s epic monochrome painting Guernica, but this contemporary art museum is worth visiting for the impressive architecture.

Prado Museum – one the world’s greatest museums with an unmissable collection. The Goya rooms are particularly special.

Botanical gardens – for a few moments of calm, head to these blissfully quiet and beautifully floral gardens. Wander amongst the foliage before embarking on more sightseeing.

TO DO

Tour Bernabeu – home to arguably the greatest football team on the planet, the Santiago Bernabeu stadium is a must for all sports lovers. Serious brownie points to be won for willing girlfriends here… pose politely with Ronaldo and you will be rewarded with shopping time later.

IvoryPress – a publishing house specialising in artists’ books with an innovative exhibition shown downstairs.

Teleferico de Rosales – Admire the city from the air with the cable car experience.

MCNY – this New York inspired nail bar offers the best manis and pedis in town, sit back and let your hands and feet be pampered.

El Rastro – the biggest flea market in Europe held every Sunday and on public holidays, colour and chaos everywhere.

Calle de las huellas – an atmospheric street… read the quotes on the floor beneath your feet and enjoy a glass of Cava in one of the authentic Spanish bars.

TO SHOP

Mini – a carefully curated selection of mens designer garments including brands: Acne, Kenzo and lesser known Gitman Bros and Save Khaki.

Nest – set in a beautiful square in Malasaña, Nest is instantly inviting with colourful flower baskets hanging outside. Step inside to discover a unique selection of items… gifts, stationery, craft papers, wall stickers and jewellery.

Mott – I fell in love with the clothes here, a brilliant edit of European and American brands attractively displayed. Dangerously tempting.

Isolee – The top concept store in Madrid, this emporium will remind some of the Parisian equivalent, Colette. Treat yourself to a bottle of perfume or a foodie treat upstairs in the Clementine café.

Cacao Sampaka – This chocolate shop is beautifully designed and sells intricate and delectable cocoa products that make perfect gifts.

Many thanks to the Madrid Tourist Board for their help with this trip, more information here.

Chris Kenny: The Flowers That Did In Eden Bloom

In a series of painstakingly constructed works using found materials (such as text cut from books, maps and abandoned landscape paintings), West London-based artist Chris Kenny examines and muses on the notion of Paradise: our attempt to define it, build it, reach it or perhaps remember it.

Rows of little wooden houses built from abandoned amateur landscape paintings are incised with the names of ideal worlds: Arcadia, Elysium, Utopia. They poignantly demonstrate the common desire to make a heaven on earth, a perfect garden, a harmonious society. Stories assembled from phrases cut from a multitude of books describe places heavenly but sinister, whilst complex floating assemblages of map fragments form circular ‘signs’ for an island or a terminus where the specific and universal are interwoven.

Kenny has exhibited with England & Co for over a decade with six solo shows to date, and has exhibited internationally including at the Museum of Art & Design, New York in their 2009 exhibition Slash: Paper Under the Knife. Kenny’s works have been reproduced in many magazines, exhibition catalogues and books, including You are Here and The Map As Art: Contemporary Artists Explore Cartography.

More information on Chris Kenny is available from the England & Co website.

Date: 26 April 2014 – 11 May 2014

Location: PM Gallery & House, Walpole Park, Mattock Lane, Ealing, London

Cost: Free

Exhibition tour
Saturday 10 May, 2pm
Join us for an informal tour of the exhibition with artist Chris Kenny.
Free – just turn up

 

Berndnaut Smilde: Antipode, Ronchini Gallery London

Ronchini Gallery London is pleased to present Antipode, an exhibition of new works by Dutch artist Berndnaut Smilde. Smilde makes multidisciplinary work through the synthesis of photography, installation, performance and sculpture.

Smilde has become known for his Nimbus series comprised of striking images of ‘real’ clouds suspended within empty rooms. Using a fog machine, he carefully adjusts the temperature and humidity to produce clouds just long enough to be photographed. There is a unique ephemeral aspect to the work where the photograph captures a very brief moment before the cloud dissipates, disappearing as mysteriously as it was formed.

Smilde’s work centres on an impermanent state of being between construction and deconstruction and is often about situations that deal with duality. The exhibition title Antipode takes its name from the geographical term which refers to parts of the earth diametrically opposite each other. By exploring space and playing with perception, he lends his vision to the uncanny. His works question the inside and outside, size, the function of materials and architectural elements.

Working in a site specific way, the artist reacts to the architecture or history of a location. The recent locations Smilde has chosen to work in are all in some way connected to exhibition spaces. For Nimbus Sankt Peter he produced a cloud inside a gothic cathedral in Cologne, Germany, at the Kunst-Station Sankt Peter, a site previously used by artists including Francis Bacon, Anish Kapoor and Cindy Sherman.

Further Nimbus works will be created in the UK, the USA and inside The Hallen, a contemporary art museum in Haarlem, The Netherlands. These spaces function as a plinth for the work and the clouds create a collision between the original state of the space and its actual function. Smilde explains:

‘If you take away or reposition objects that occupy buildings and spaces, there is a stronger emphasis on the bare architectural elements that define a space. That’s where I start working from.’

In a miniature version of Kammerspiele  an on-going work Smilde has presented in different formats since 2011 and most recently at the Bonnefantenmuseum in Maastricht in 2013 – found postcards of idyllic landscapes are ruptured with blocks of miniature white tiles creating friction between ideal and functionality. Smilde deconstructs the ideal landscape and uses the viewer’s free navigation, so that a clear-cut perspective disappears.

In Antipode Smilde projects a colour spectrum onto an image of a dark landscape featuring a romantic old castle. The work explores the suggestion of a rainbow and its connotations of perfection and promise juxtaposed with the fact it is projected upside down and alongside the isolation of the solitary castle. The image of the castle originates from a card made for a stereoscope, one of the first attempts to see images in 3D.

About the artist

Berndnaut Smilde (b. 1978, Groningen) lives and works in Amsterdam. He has exhibited across The Netherlands and also in Toronto, Taipei, Istanbul, Dublin, Paris, London, Rotterdam and San Francisco. In 2013, he opened his first large scale solo exhibition in the US at Land of Tomorrow in Louisville, Kentucky, and guest curated a show at the Bonnefantenmuseum in Maastricht where he exhibited his personal choice of works from the collection in a dialogue with his own work. Smilde’s work resides in both the Saatchi and the Smithsonian collections among others. Smilde has been written about extensively in art publications; additionally his Nimbus series was recognised by TIME Magazine as one of the ”Top Ten Inventions of 2012″and was covered by the BBC and Reuters. He created works that featured Karl Lagerfeld, Donatella Versace, Dolce & Gabbana and Alber Elbaz for the Harper’s Bazaar U.S. September 2013 issue.  He was a resident artist at the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin in 2008. He received his BA in 2001 from the Minerva Academy and his MA in 2005 from the Frank Mohr Institute, both in The Netherlands. Smilde had a solo exhibition at the DSM Collection in Heerlen, The Netherlands, September 2013 – January 2014. His work was exhibited at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. as part of the ‘A Decade of Collecting’ exhibition, July 2013 – January 2014 and at SOMArts in San Francisco, November – December 2013. His work was included in an exhibition about artists who feature clouds in their work at the Musèe de La Poste in Paris February – May 2014. Smilde is represented by Ronchini Gallery in London.

Exhibition: Berndnaut Smilde, Antipode

Dates: 11 April – 14 June 2014

Opening Hours: Monday-Friday 10AM – 6PM, Saturday 11AM – 5PM

Location: 22 Dering Street, London, W1S 1AN

Tel: +44 (0)20 7629 9188

Press Release from Ronchini Gallery, visit the website here.