February 12
Sorry, as always, we're slowly falling behind. Being sick didn't help anything, but it is now the evening of February 13th. We hope that you will enjoy this very long post.
Today, we are off to see Leonardo Da Vinci's Last Supper. This picture, painted by Da Vinci between 1495-1498, was painted in the refectory of the Monastery of Santa Maria delle Grazie. We couldn't buy ordinary tickets a month in advance, but it was possible to buy tickets by taking a guided tour. We are so glad that we went for this option!
After a nice conversation with a couple from Seattle who were attending their first Olympics as part of spending a month in Italy, a small, grey-haired woman arrived and said that she was the Linda that we were looking for. An assistant handed out electronic earphones so everyone could hear her. She said that everything at this site works on a tight schedule. Fifteen minutes before our start time, we go to the ticket office/Security to make sure that our tickets are valid and that we aren't carrying anything that we shouldn't be carrying. Then we meet outside the church:
She asked us if we noticed anything unusual about this church. When someone suggested that the back of the church didn't look like the front, she got a big smile on her face. "Esattamente" (exactly)!
Linda tells us that hiring Da Vinci to paint was another effort by Ludovico to "upgrade" his neighborhood church. Then it was time to enter to see The Last Supper. We enter the first of two airlocks used to keep the humidity/temperature/air quality constant to limit degradation of the painting. She showed us a picture from WW II. She said that Milan was bombed by the Allies and the church suffered a hit. But she said that the monks were really smart. The had built scaffolding around the walls of the refectory and then lined the walls with sandbags to protect the painting. Linda tells us that it was a miracle that it survived. She said that even so, only about 40% of the picture is original. A big problem was that the painting is in the monk's dining hall and on the other side of the wall that Da Vinci worked on was the kitchen. She also said that Da Vinci was trying to make what Linda called "Renaissance Virtual-Reality". What Da Vinci wanted to do required pain-staking effort and the normal method of painting frescos would not work. The oil-based painting started degrading almost as soon as Da Vinci finished it. Linda also said that the monks were very negative on the painting to start because they had lost the use of their lunchroom for nearly 4 years!
After a few minutes, we pass into a second airlock. From this, we can see part of the monastery:
Finally, the doors open for our 15 minutes with the painting. Here are a couple of pictures:
Before our 15 minutes are up, we look at the painting on the opposite wall of the crucifixion, also painted by a master at nearly the same time:
Our tour also includes a quick tour of the church next door. Linda pays a couple of euros so that we can turn on the lights inside for a few minutes. Here is the before and after:
The last area we visit is supposed to have some of Michelangelo's work. It turns out that there are really only two pieces: one that he was working on when he died and another a bust:
Then it is time to get going. We go back to the hotel briefly to grab a quick lunch and then head to the ice hockey arena to see Canada play Czechia. We are really excited, because our local star, 19-year-old Macklin Celebrini, is the youngest player on Team Canada. Like the Slovaks the night before, the Czech fans are here in big numbers. They even took the time to put up banners for their favorite players all around the bottom of the lower bowl:
You would think that this was a Czechia home game! But Canada was not worried. Unlike the Czechs, all of their players play in the NHL and every line features at least two legitimate stars. The Czechs played excellent defense the whole first period until Celebrini manages to deflect a shot into the net with less than 10 seconds left in the period:




























































