All the world’s an island: Correspondent Carol-Ann covers the Globe with only a back pack Part 6
On to Vienna, Zurich, and Antwerp
Traveling by train from Venice through northern Italy and the mountains of Austria, once again I found very good company in the person of a professor of Art History. She is Austrian but immigrated to Dallas, Texas when she married her U.S. Naval Commander husband. We shared talk about art and sampled delicious Italian candy she had brought with her.
It was late at night when I arrived at the Reumannplatz station in Vienna. My host René, a team leader for a software company, found each other a short time later. I was very excited to be in Austria; like all European countries at the beginning of my trip I knew only the cream skimmed off the top of their history and a little of its beauty. I couldn’t wait to experience it.
We arrived at Rene’s home where I met his wife Dita, a Czech, and their son Mark, 5 years old. They have a daughter too; Laura, 10 years old. As late as it was, we stayed up talking until well into the night. Waking up about 9:00 the next day, I enjoyed a leisurely breakfast with the family before leaving with Rene for the heart of the city. We traveled by bus, trolley, and subway, clean and graffiti-free.
Following that brief stop, we headed for the Imperial Treasury of Vienna museum at the Hofburg Palace and spent the next two hours viewing 21 rooms containing thousand-year-old treasures, both secular and religious. The dazzling collection highlights the social and political power of the empire held by the emperors and kings of the Holy Roman Empire. The Nazis took the Imperial Regalia to Nuremberg after the Anschluss in 1938 but the U.S. returned them to Vienna and their rightful home at the end of World War II.
The rain abated, and we continued on to the nearby Kunthistorisches Museum, the Museum of Art History, on Maria-Theresien-Platz. It opened about 1891 along with its sister museum, the Naturhistorisches Museum, the Museum of Natural History. For the next two or three hours, I relished another of the finest art collections in the world: works by Jan van Eyck, Albrecht Dürer, Michelangelo, Rubens, Raphael, Rembrandt, Vermeer, Brueghel to name a few. In addition, we walked through the Egyptian and Near Eastern Collection, Greek and Roman Antiquities, and more.
It was a hot day with temperatures in the high 80s-low 90s. I played tourist again, walking through the Schonbrunn drinking in the opulence of an earlier royal existence. For most of my trip, I was able to take photos freely; here, I was cautioned not to
There is so much to see at the Palace; I saw a small number of the 1,441 rooms which still took about 2 hours. The grounds include a zoo, a puppet theater, a children’s playground, restaurants, the Neptune Fountain, Roman Ruin (not actually from the Roman era) and many well-groomed gardens and gazebos. The high point for me—pun intended—was a climb up the 200 foot high hill where sits a stunning structure called the Gloriette overlooking the palace and Vienna.
But the day was wearing on and I had far more to see. Leaving the Schonbrunn, I found my way to the Albertina—another of the world’s great art museums with a permanent collection of a hundred-plus years of modern artists, from the French Impressionists Monet, Picasso, Renoir, Degas, Cezanne, Toulouse-Lautrec and Signac to the German Expressionists and Russian Avant-Garde artists. I have long been fond of the works of Chagall and delighted in seeing his original works.
Arriving in Zurich the next morning, I spent a couple of hours walking and sitting in a nearby park, too tired to tackle yet another museum. I returned to the station and took advantage of one of the perks of my Eurail Global Pass, relaxing in a salon complete with drinks, snacks, restrooms, television, newspapers, internet and charging stations. Late in the afternoon I boarded
IMAGES: (Carol-Ann Rudy)
PHOTO 1 Rene Mark and Dita in Vienna
PHOTO 2 Schonbrunn Palace and Vienna as seen from the Gloriette
PHOTO 3 The Gloriette and Neptune’s Fountain at Schonbrunn Palace
PHOTO 4 The Peasant Dance by Pieter Bruegel the Elder
PHOTO 6 Crown of Austria
PHOTO 7 Masterpiece in Gold
PHOTO 8 Bird sculpted in Lapis Lazuli
PHOTO 9 Black Hat by Alex Katz
PHOTO 10 Painting by Paul Delvaux at The Albertina
PHOTO 11 Der Papierdrachen The Kite by Marc Chagall
PHOTO 12 A Selfie in the Albertina
NEXT: The Treasures and Pleasures of Antwerp and Bruges
To read the first part of Carol-Ann’s story of how she covers the globe with only a backpack published in iNews Cayman on August 11 2014 go to: http://www.ieyenews.com/wordpress/all-the-worlds-an-island-correspondent-carol-ann-covers-the-globe-with-only-a-back-pack/
To read the third part of Carol-Ann’s story of how she covers the globe with only a backpack published in iNews Cayman on August 26 2014 go to: http://www.ieyenews.com/wordpress/all-the-worlds-an-island-correspondent-carol-ann-covers-the-globe-with-only-a-back-pack-part-three/
To read the fourth part of Carol-Ann’s story of how she covers the globe with only a backpack published in iNews Cayman on September 8 2014 go to: http://www.ieyenews.com/wordpress/all-the-worlds-an-island-correspondent-carol-ann-covers-the-globe-with-only-a-back-pack-part-four/