Authors: James Michener
When I say spire I do not mean the traditional church steeple
that ends in a cross. I mean something quite different. A French
visitor was also in the street, looking through field glasses at the
top of one of the spires, and noticing my interest, said, ‘One of
the true masterpieces of modern art. Regard.’ He passed me the
glasses, and at first I could not believe what I was seeing through
them. First of all, the spires were built in such a way that they
resembled pretzel sticks studded with salt crystals, except that at
the upper end they narrowed down to points of rock candy,
brilliantly colored. The spire was decorated with ceramic bits set
in plaster and color was reflected everywhere. ‘The sun lives in
each part,’ the admiring Frenchman said, and since many of the
ceramic pieces were finished in gold, the spire seemed to be a
finger of the sun.
‘Have you studied the tip?’ he asked, and how can I explain
what I saw when I did? I said it wasn’t a cross but I would be hard
put to say what it was. I could think only of Angkor Wat and its
repeated use of the cobra head with hood extended. Yes, it looked
much like a cobra, except that it was angular, off center, totally
bizarre and with the hood indicated by a score of ceramic balls
that looked as if they had been racked up for a celestial billiard
game. There was also something that resembled a fourleaf clover
and a series of golden protuberances that looked like either sails
or segments of a peeled orange.
‘Glorious, eh?’ the Frenchman asked.
the glasses and passed into the unfinished building, but I remained
in the street, studying the lower portions of the façade, for it was
here and not in the fantastic towers that the genius of Gaudí had
manifested itself. The entire front was a kind of garden rising
vertically from the pavement. Vines climbed upward to provide
niches in which statues of Biblical figures stood as if resting in
some countryside grape arbor. What in a traditional façade would
have been a pillar, here became a tree in whose spreading branches
perched stone birds. On either side of the main entrance, at eye
level, families of realistic chickens scratched, beautifully carved,
and wherever human figures appeared, animal life appeared also,
for it was obvious that Gaudí had loved nature; his definition of
religion encompassed all that lived.
I suppose the outstanding characteristic of the façade was that
when seen from where I stood, there was scarcely a square foot
that was not covered with ornament in some way. One night,
when I saw it illuminated by flares, it cast a million shadows and
the spires looked like decorations on a wedding cake. Few lines
were straight and some of the windows were wonderfully
inventive; the man who designed this facade knew what fun was.
It reminded me of two other structures I’d seen, one in Barcelona
and the other in Watts, the Negro section of Los Angeles. The
first, of course, was the Palau de la Música, and I assumed that
Gaudí had also built that, but I was wrong. In Barcelona at the
turn of the century there had been a flowering of the Catalan
spirit, and a different group of architects had been responsible
for the Palau. As for Los Angeles, in Watts in the early years of
this century an immigrant Italian tile setter named Simon Rodia
decided to build by himself a memorial to his love for the United
States, and it took the form of a cluster of huge towers one
hundred feet tall and built of iron rods handsomely interwoven.
He ornamented them with anything he could salvage from junk
yards: broken plates, green and blue soft-drink bottles, chipped
cups and saucers, flashy tiles from old bathrooms. From the
seashore he collected shells and from garbage dumps odd
containers, and all this he set into concrete slabs which formed
the sides of his structure. Working pragmatically and alone, he
spent thirty-three years on his task, creating what has been called
‘the greatest structure ever made by one man.’ Today the towers
have become an embarrassment to Los Angeles, for they have
begun to deteriorate and vandals have worked much damage; it
may be that they will have to be torn down, but if they vanish
something unique and beautiful will have been lost, as subtle as
the skin of a lizard, and committees have been formed to save
them, for many world critics judge them to be the one authentic
work of art to have been produced by California. At any rate, if
one has seen the Watts towers he is prepared for the Gaudí, and
vice versa.
I left the street and passed through the façade as if I were
entering the church, but inside there was nothing. Not even the
walls were up, except at the unfinished transept. ‘How long have
they been building this?’ I asked a caretaker.
‘A long time,’ he said, pointing to a crane I had not previously
seen. Some work was under way, but from the magnitude of the
task that lay ahead, I judged it would take a crew of thousands
forty or fifty years to finish. ‘Are they proceeding with it?’ I asked,
but the caretaker shrugged his shoulders.
I did find a placard which explained the façade. It was intended
to portray events connected with the birth of Christ, and the four
spires represented the major symbols of the faith which Christ
had founded: the cross, the walking stick of Joseph, the ring and
the miter, though what religious significance the last three had I
did not know, but I did not know that an architect of noble
imagination and vast intention had drafted this memorial to the
Holy Family but had somehow run out of energy. The demanding
task had staggered to a halt and I saw in the gaping emptiness
both wonder and tragedy and was driven to discover what had
happened and why.
I asked so many questions about the building that friends
arranged for me to meet the one man in Barcelona best equipped
to explain. I was taken to an attractive country-style house which
now stood well within the city but which must have been in a
rural area when built. An old-style fence with the kind of latched
gate I knew as a boy surrounded a pleasant yard, and at the door
of the house a girl obviously just in from the country bowed and
said in Catalan, ‘Dr. Bonet will see you shortly.’ She led me into
a library, where I found, in addition to the ninety volumes of the
The door to the library swung open and a slight, old-fashioned
gentleman in dark suit and vest, in his late sixties perhaps, came
into the room with that air of excitement which marks men who
love to talk about work that fascinates them. ‘Luis Bonet y Gari,’
the man said, extending his hand. ‘I am delighted to meet with
someone from América del Norte who knows the work of Antoni
Gaudí.’ I decided not to tell him that I was there because I knew
nothing about Gaudí, for it was obvious that he had much to tell.
He wore a black bow tie which stood out against the whiteness
of his shirt and hair. His eyes were unnaturally bright and he
spoke crisply.
‘I am, as they told you, the architect of the Sagrada Familia. I
was a student of Gaudís, and although no one can say what his
exact plans were for finishing the structure, I am at least in
harmony with his general ideas.’
Dr. Bonet was surprised that an expert like me didn’t know
this fundamental fact about the master, but he said courteously,
‘Born 1852 Antoni Gaudí i Cornet in the small Catalan town of
Reus. Struck down by an automobile here in Barcelona in 1926.
Unrecognized, he was thrown into a pauper’s bed in an
out-of-the-way hospital, where he died some days later without
having regained consciousness.’
‘Then the Sagrada Familia dates from the last…’