A Sea of Stories Gaudi

Page 1

A Sea of Stories

GaudĂ­ Text Anna Manso Illustrations Sonja Wimmer



I

am an ocellated lizard and I appear to be

you like to come with me? I’ll show you

it is only worth learning about the lives of

marvels!” And I scrambled into the pocket

an unremarkable beast. Some think that

humans who have contributed something

special to history, humans like Antoni Gaudí,

what my father can do. He can work of his shorts.

He took me to the village and we entered

the famous Catalan architect. But I, for

his father’s workshop. I poked my head out

planet. In fact, our lives go hand in hand. My

man pounding a sheet of metal again and

instance, am the most famous lizard on the story is his story too. The story of two friends, a human and a lizard, filled with seemingly

impossible dreams which actually came true. We met in July 1859, in an olive tree grove

on the outskirts of Riudoms, the village

and the sight of the fire, the sparks and the

again to shape it into a boiler left me agape. Using his bellows, Antoni’s father fanned

the flames until a shower of sparks fell over Antoni and of course over me.

“Antoni! I’ve told you a hundred times

where the Gaudí family lived, though Antoni

not to come so close else you’ll scorch your

Reus seven years earlier. The evening of our

But we had already been slightly burned.

had been born in the neighbouring town of

hair and clothes!”

first encounter was a strange one. It wasn’t

Something else happened too. Small

There I was, resting, when two boys began

lightning. Antoni felt them too because

yet dark, but the moon had already risen. using me for target practice, showering me with stones. Without a moment’s thought, I bit them hard on their ankles. Suddenly, a scrawny, sickly-looking boy with red hair challenged them.

“If I were you, I’d scarper. My dad, the

boilermaker, is coming with a red-hot

whirlwinds passed through my body like when we went outside, he held me in the

palm of his hand and looked at me, startled. “Are you all right, Valiant?” Antoni had

found a name for me.

“Yes,” I replied and my newly discovered

voice surprised both of us.

“Valiant! You can talk! Or I can understand

poker he’s just taken out of the furnace to

you! It’s true what my grandfather used to

The boys fled in alarm and Antoni came

“What… what… what did you grandfather

wallop you with.”

say!”

over to where I lay and looked at me tenderly.

used to say?” I enquired, disconcerted.

aren’t you pretty?” he murmured. “Would

works magic.”

“Hello there you brave little fellow,

“That the boilermakers’ fire sometimes


Whatever the cause, from that evening on

Eventually though he made two good

we were able to talk and became firm friends.

friends at the Pia School in Reus: Eduard Toda

to be still, observing nature. Antoni was in

to school so we could meet each other.

Both of us enjoyed walking and we also liked poor health and stayed indoors for long

and Josep Ribera. One day he even took me “This is Valiant and I’ve brought him here

spells. When he felt strong enough, they sent

to study because he wants to learn to be a

I took him to different places like the Coll de

His friends laughed, but not unkindly so

him out for a stroll to get some fresh air and

dragon.”

la Desenrocada, a place full of big weathered

we didn’t mind.

Argentera. As we walked he told me stories,

magazine, El Arlequín. Antoni said he would

legend of Saint George and the dragon.

happy. He sketched me over and over again,

rocks just a short distance from the village of like the tales from the Arabian Nights or the

“A dragon is a lizard, like you,” Antoni

explained. “But they are enormous, and they can fly and breathe fire and they are powerful

and magical. The dragon in the legend gobbled

In 1867 the three school chums created a

do the illustrations. Drawing made him

and as he did so he studied me carefully with those eyes of his which saw things that nobody else could see.

“How I do like your skin, Valiant. It looks

people up, so Saint George had to slay him.”

broken, like a colourful tile that is thrown

eat anyone, but I want to fly and be powerful

thousand pieces,” Antoni said, already

“I… I… I want to be a dragon! I wouldn’t

and magical!” I cried excitedly.

“Well, I want to build magical mountains

like these ones! And houses! And palaces!” Antoni exclaimed. We both laughed, happy to spend time together.

But Antoni found it hard to make friends

with other children. And when it was time

to the ground and, smash, cracks into a imagining what would later become his famous trencadís, a mosaic technique using broken tiles.

In 1869 he explained that he was leaving

for Barcelona to study at the Provincial School of Architecture.

“If you leave, I’m coming with you.

for him to go to school, he found it very trying.

Perhaps in Barcelona I’ll find out how I can

“I learn more spending time with you or

And just as I had done so many times

The only subject he liked was geometry.

working on the boilers with my father,” he complained to me.

become a dragon,” I said to him.

before, I scrambled into his cape pocket and our lives changed forever.



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