I'm going to Barcelona in July 2013

I'll be in Barcelona from 9-13 July 2013. It's going to be another sketchwalk holiday — the best type of holiday!

It happens that the Urban Sketchers Barcelona Symposium 2013 is also happening around that time from 11-13 July. There are going to be a lot of sketchers in the city during those three days. I'm not attending the symposium though. I'll just be sketching around Barcelona and then joining my sketch buddies for an extended trip to Madrid after that weekend.

I know there are many Gaudi buildings there. I wonder if I can visit them all. I'm so inspired after seeing Nina Johansson's sketchbook Drawing Around Sagrada Familia, and all the watercolour travel sketchbooks by Fabrice Moireau.

What should I look out for? Or what should I not miss when I'm there?

If you guys want to hang out and sketch, I'm all for it too.

This is terribly exciting! First time in Europe!

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I'm from Barcelona although I

I'm from Barcelona although I'll be not there in those days, Definitely you can't miss from Gaudi:

Parc Güell (enjoy the opportunity to wander through the park and get inspired by the wonderful views from almost all Barcelona): https://goo.gl/maps/D7JSg
Casa Batllo: https://goo.gl/maps/MLi0W
Sagrada Familia: https://goo.gl/maps/u6JaN

Try to avoid visiting these sites on a weekend, I think usually there are too many people to draw properly.
Hope you have a wonderful time in your visit.

Barcelona is great: it's the

Barcelona is great: it's the city I try to visit once a year. Amazing place for illustrators and it has a very vivid illustration community. It's a bit hard to get into that community as most of them don't speak English too good, or even Spanish (although you ARE in spain when in Barcelona) but mostly speak Catalan (a dialect). But there's a lot to discover.

The local illustrator Javier Mariscal is a hero (www.mariscal.com). His work is present all over the city. He's know for his animated movie 'Chico & Rita' but has also done poster art, graphic design, comic strips, logo design... Keep an eye open for his work (for example: the logo of the Barcelona Zoo is done by him and you'll see a HUGE lobster statue he made: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c8/Gamba_de_Mariscal_-_...

His art books are great (and not always easy to find when you're not in Spain). So keep an eye open for them. They are really astonishing.

Other than that: if you're in a touristy mood, Els 4 Gats is the bar Picasso frequented before he left spain to work in Paris. It's still open today, but is mostly swamped by tourists. But it still has the atmosphere it had back in his days. The Picasso museum in Barcelona, not far from there, is AN ABSOLUTE MUST SEE! They keep his (youth) sketchbooks there... and they are exhibited most of the time...

Meeting local talent is not easy in the summer: a lot of people that work there are not Barcelona natives and go home during summer as the city is swamped with tourists.

Great bookstores:
https://abracadabrallibres.com - childrens books and illustrated books.

If you ever decide to visit Barcelona again, try to come during the FiComic weekend: it's the second biggest comic book fair in Europe, and I always go home with heaps of art books that are nowhere to be found but in Spain...

Other book tips: if you're awake on Sunday morning (from 9am until 2pm), and not to far from the Raval neigbbourhood, visit the San Antonio book market. It's more a flea market for books, but the gems you can find there are astonishing. I've bought picture books from the twenties there that costed me 50 cents... Stuff that would cost me 300 euro in an antique book shop... In my experience: mostly art books and some novels too.

La Central del Raval (Carrer d'elisabets 6) is the most beautifull bookstore in Barcelona, in an old Chapel. They have a great selection of artbooks and comic books in various languages (so not only spanish but also english, sometimes even french, ...)

Libreria Loring Art (has art books, on art, not too much cinema art books)

Food: try to follow the rhythm of the locals: they eat early in the morning, work until 14h o'clock - then a lot of stores close. People have a siesta, or hang around in bars, and live really catches on again in the evening. Most of them eat around 8pm.
Be sure to try their local sea food: i love the Paella (but ask if it is fresh, they sell preheated microwave paella too which is inedible if you ask me. And before you eat take an hour or maybe even two: have your sketchbook, sit down in a bar and draw people while you enjoy tapas: patatas bravas, anchovy, ... Everybody does it ;)

One other thing I ALWAYS do when in Barcelona is take out half a day to go to the shore, and visit the Barcelona Aquarium. It's one of the best in it's kind in Europe and very sketch-friendly.

If you have a bit of time, I

If you have a bit of time, I highly recommend visiting Montserrat if you have a bit of spare time. The views are breathtaking, there's a decent art gallery in the monestary and you'll be inspired to do some landscapes even if you're not usually a landscape artist. It's a pretty unique experience, I visited Barcelona this time last year.

Careful on the Boqueria (and

Careful on the Boqueria (and Ramblas too) because it's infested with pickpockets and muggers. I always evade those gigantic tourist traps. Hardly know anyone that hasn't been harassed or his wallet stolen there.

I sent a comment two days ago

I sent a comment two days ago but it didnt arrive :(

Next 13th July a important comic school of Barcelona will organize a contest of urban sketchers. I hope you can join it!

The organization gives you a Moleskine notebook where you must draw places of the following list:

- Santa María del Mar
- Passeig / Mercat del Born
- Parc de la Ciutadella
- Passeig Lluis Companys
- Arc de Trionf

https://escolajosoblog.wordpress.com/2013/07/03/concurso-de-dibujo-urban...

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