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  • Audi Just Unveiled a Sleek New A6 Avant Station Wagon

    Audi Just Unveiled a Sleek New A6 Avant Station Wagon

    The new A6 Avant station wagon arrives ahead of an expected A6 sedan for the U.S. The new A6 Avant station wagon arrives ahead of an expected A6 sedan for the U.S.

  • Here’s What It’s Like to Drive at One of the Best Private-Track Clubs in the World

    Here’s What It’s Like to Drive at One of the Best Private-Track Clubs in the World

    The 250-acre Magarigawa circuit, about 66 miles from Tokyo, is a 2.2-mile gauntlet complemented by a scenic backdrop nearly as exhilarating. The 250-acre Magarigawa circuit, about 66 miles from Tokyo, is a 2.2-mile gauntlet complemented by a scenic backdrop nearly as exhilarating.

  • An Art Trail of Joan Miró’s Spain

    An Art Trail of Joan Miró’s Spain

    We explore the places that inspired Miró and influenced some of the most important works of modern art. 

    Forget the Flamenco dancers, the paella, and even the sun-kissed beaches. If you really want to feel the soul of Spain, you need to experience it through the eyes of its artists.

    While Spain has proudly claimed some of the most celebrated names in art history, you might be surprised to learn that many of them spent much of their lives far from home. Pablo Picasso thrived in the creative chaos of Paris, Francisco Goya lived out his later years in Bordeaux and Salvador Dalí often drifted between France and the US.

    But then there’s Joan Miró – the Catalan artist whose international acclaim never took him far from his roots in Spain. Miró’s work may be bold, abstract, and at times challenging to interpret, but his love for Spain – specifically his deep Catalan pride – is unmistakable and far easier to understand.

    Throughout his career, Miró was vocal about rejecting traditional painting methods, famously declaring the need for an “assassination of painting” to break away from convention. Yet, while he sought to revolutionize art, his inspiration remained firmly anchored in the landscapes, light, and culture of his homeland.

    To truly understand the artist’s connection to Spain, we’re following in the footsteps of Joan Miró – exploring the places that shaped him, inspired him, and, in turn, influenced some of the most important works of modern art.

    [See also: Follow in Pablo Picasso’s Footsteps on This Art Trail of Spain]

    Barcelona

    Fundació Joan Miró is perched on Barcelona’s Montjuïc hill / ©Fundació Joan Miró

    Born on April 20, 1893, in the bustling El Raval neighborhood (better known today as the city’s Gothic Quarter) Joan Miró spent his youth and much of his early adult life in Barcelona, Spain. Though his creative spark was ignited here, Miró’s path to becoming an artist wasn’t exactly straightforward. In fact, before he picked up a paintbrush, he picked up a ledger, studying at business school and working as an accounting clerk in his teens. That is, until a nervous breakdown forced him to abandon the corporate world for a more colorful one.

    Influenced by the works of Vincent van Gogh and Paul Cézanne, Miró’s early paintings reflected the vibrant energy of the Fauves and the experimental nature of the Cubists. Art historians often refer to this time as his Catalan Fauvist period, a nod to his connection with his homeland and the avant-garde movement. But at Miró’s first solo exhibition in 1918, critics weren’t exactly kind – his work was ridiculed, and some of it was even defaced. But, as with most trailblazing artists, the world eventually caught up.

    The museum boasts over 10,000 pieces of Miró’s items / © Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona. Photo: Pep Herrero

    Today, Barcelona proudly celebrates Miró’s legacy with The Fundació Joan Miró, a modern art museum perched on Montjuïc hill. Designed by his friend and collaborator Josep Lluís Sert, the museum opened its doors in 1975, offering visitors a chance to explore over 10,000 pieces of Miró’s art and items. Celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, the Fundació continues to be a vibrant testament to the artist’s enduring connection to the city where it all began.

    fmirobcn.org

    Mont-roig del Camp

    Mont-roig del Camp, where Miró spent many summers, Tarragona, Spain / ©Shutterstock

    In 1911, a bout of typhoid fever led a young Miró to the tranquil countryside of Mont-roig del Camp, where he stayed in a farmhouse his parents had recently purchased. What began as a place of recovery soon became a lifelong source of inspiration for the artist. Miró fell in love with Mont-roig’s natural beauty, and it’s said that this quiet corner of Tarragona shaped much of his creative vision. As he put it himself, “All my work is conceived in Mont-roig.” 

    Throughout the late 1920s, Miró regularly retreated to Mont-roig, where the landscape, light, and peaceful atmosphere fueled many of his most significant works. This small coastal town became his creative haven, and he continued to return to the farmhouse every summer until 1976, drawn to the place that grounded him both emotionally and artistically. One of his most important paintings, The Farm, is a tribute to this very place, capturing the essence of rural life that so deeply resonated with him.

    Today, visitors can step into Miró’s world by visiting Mas Miró, the very farmhouse where he spent countless hours painting and sculpting. The house remains much as it was during his final visit, offering a rare glimpse into the private studio where Miró’s imagination came to life.

    masmiro.com

    Palma de Mallorca

    The studio and workshop of artist Joan Miró at the Miró Foundation museum, Palma de Mallorca, Spain / ©Shutterstock

    After the turbulence of the Spanish Civil War, Miró sought solace and a fresh start on the sun-drenched island of Mallorca. In 1956, he settled in the town of Cala Major, where he designed and built a magnificent studio that would serve as the heart of his creative world for the remainder of his life. Miró found in Mallorca the perfect balance between tranquility and inspiration, with the island’s vivid landscapes and serene Mediterranean atmosphere deeply influencing his later works.

    In his expansive studio, Miró had the freedom to experiment like never before. It was here that he produced some of his most ambitious pieces, including monumental murals and striking sculptures. Miró lived out his later years on the island that had so deeply inspired him, and it was in Palma de Mallorca that he passed away in 1983, leaving behind a legacy that continues to shape the world of modern art.

    Today, Palma proudly celebrates its connection to Miró with the Pilar i Joan Miró Foundation, a museum and cultural center dedicated to his legacy. Established in 1981, the foundation was named in honor of both the artist and his wife, Pilar Juncosa, and now houses over 6,000 of his works. Visitors can explore Miró’s original studio and get an intimate glimpse into the space where his creativity flourished.

    miromallorca.com

    For more information, visit spain.info  

    [See also: The Best Art Galleries in Spain]

  • These 20,000-Year-Old Vehicle Tracks Suggest a New Timeline for Human Migration

    These 20,000-Year-Old Vehicle Tracks Suggest a New Timeline for Human Migration

    Markings found in White Sands National Park in New Mexico were made by an X-shaped travois, or vehicle. Markings found in White Sands National Park in New Mexico were made by an X-shaped travois, or vehicle.

  • A Watchdog Group Told People to Not Buy Maine Lobster. Now It’s Facing a Lawsuit.

    A Watchdog Group Told People to Not Buy Maine Lobster. Now It’s Facing a Lawsuit.

    A recent legal ruling allows the Maine Lobstermen’s Association to proceed with its suit against the nonprofit Seafood Watch. A recent legal ruling allows the Maine Lobstermen’s Association to proceed with its suit against the nonprofit Seafood Watch.

  • A $65 Million Miami Mansion With an Aquarium So Big a Scuba Diver Has to Clean It

    A $65 Million Miami Mansion With an Aquarium So Big a Scuba Diver Has to Clean It

    The Venetian Islands home is owned by Jacob Helberg, President Trump’s pick for undersecretary of state for economic growth, energy, and the environment, and his husband, venture capitalist Keith Rabois.  The Venetian Islands home is owned by Jacob Helberg, President Trump’s pick for undersecretary of state for economic growth, energy, and the environment, and his husband, venture capitalist Keith Rabois. 

  • First Drive: The Maserati GT2 Stradale Is a Muscular Performer That Could Use More Visceral Punch

    First Drive: The Maserati GT2 Stradale Is a Muscular Performer That Could Use More Visceral Punch

    On Spain’s open roads and Ascari race circuit, we found the 631 hp machine to be impressively balanced, just not breathtaking.   On Spain’s open roads and Ascari race circuit, we found the 631 hp machine to be impressively balanced, just not breathtaking.  

  • Mike Horn on Resilience, Courage and His Watch of Choice

    Mike Horn on Resilience, Courage and His Watch of Choice

    Over three decades, Horn has pushed the boundaries of human potential. 

    mike horn

    Explorer Mike Horn has solo-expeditioned in some of the harshest climates in the world, defying death and staring down obstacles like anacondas in the Amazon, polar bears in the Arctic and freezing ocean temperatures when the ice he was standing on broke. Despite losing his fingertips and toes to frostbite, he continues to explore. He tells Elite Traveler’s Roberta Naas what drives him.

    Mike Horn is widely regarded as one of the most accomplished explorers of our era, renowned for his extraordinary ability to thrive in brutal conditions. Over three decades, Horn has pushed the boundaries of human potential through feats of endurance, courage and sheer inner determination: He took on a solo circumnavigation of the globe along the equator without the assistance of motorized equipment; he also circumnavigated the Arctic Circle (a 12,000-mile, two-year journey) in the same manner, trekked to the North Pole in complete darkness during winter, and was part of the first team to cross both the South and North Poles.

    His 1997 Amazon River journey remains a standout in his storied career. After training with Brazilian special forces, he solo-hiked from the Pacific Ocean to the Amazon’s source in the Peruvian Andes, then navigated nearly 4,400 miles of river on a hydrospeed board — living off the environment while confronting anacondas and piranhas, plus breaking a bone, over the course of six months.

    [See also: Jean-Michel Cousteau on a Life Below the Waves]

    These extreme adventures — along with high-altitude endurance after summiting four of the highest mountains in the world and doing two years’ compulsory military service — underscore not only Horn’s physical stamina but also his extraordinary mental strength: “I understood at 17 or 18, when I was sent to war, that physical strength is limited but the power of the mind can outlast it. If you are afraid, you can never engage 100%. It is a button you have to turn on in your mind. I understood that my willingness and determination to survive must be bigger than the fear.”

    Horn, a Panerai brand ambassador and a man who likes to draw analogies to help people understand the thinking behind these incredible feats, says he was inspired as a child by several factors — not the least of which was his active father, who was a rugby star and who believed in pushing limits. He also says his philosophy is inspired by Maslow’s pyramid (a theory that organizes human needs into five levels), which he uses to explain the prioritization of needs.

    “When you live at home, what is important is your family, your comfort. But as you move up the pyramid, your needs change. When you go to war, your things, your car, your house — they are not as important as survival,” he says. “When you live on the top of the pyramid, where all that matters is survival, nothing else comes into play, and that is where you live your life to its fullest.”

    mike horn panerai expedition watch
    Panerai Submersible GMT Titanio Mike Horn Experience Edition watch, PAM01670 /©Paneai

    Horn’s expeditions have often pushed him to the edge. He has been bitten by snakes, lost fingertips to frostbite, and narrowly escaped death more than once. He recounts his experience of falling into the polar ocean when he was crossing the ice.

    “First you think about finding a way out; then, when you are out, you have only minutes to get dry, get warm — or die. The entire process from falling in until death is only about 14 minutes and, while that seems like a long time, it isn’t. Your mind has to process and force your body to move quickly. So, survival is more of a trade. It is something life teaches you when you go through these experiences again and again.”

    Horn adds that luck definitely plays a role: “In circumstances that are not under our control, we need a little bit of luck, as well. Luck is something that allows explorers to live a little bit longer.”

    [See also: Life and Death with the San: A Botswana Safari with Wilderness]

    However, he admits that luck is just a tiny part of it. “If you’re not serious in the extreme sport of being an explorer, you’re not losing a match, you’re losing a life. We can play life only once. So, the way we prepare ourselves, the way we make decisions and basically surround ourselves with the best people that possibly can help you to survive, is key.”

    This mindset means embracing risks. “I’d rather live one day as a lion than a lifetime as a sheep. If you think of a cliff, you think about how far from the cliff face you’re going to walk. Some will walk 10 or 15 ft from the cliff, but I’m going to walk on the cliff face, and if I make a mistake, I fall. The only difference between life away from the cliff or on the cliff is the view. I like to see the full view; I don’t want to see the same thing every day of my life, and if that means I see more in a shorter time, that’s the way I choose to live.”

    [See also: Mary Jean Tully on Why She’s Been on Safari 50 Times (and Counting)]

    From early in his career, Horn has partnered with Panerai, a Richemont Group brand renowned for its high-performance watches. On each expedition, he relies on a single watch designed to meet his extreme needs. He recalls knowing he was going to walk and ski the North Pole in almost complete darkness, so the brand worked to create a luminous watch. It also worked with him to develop materials that rendered the watches antimagnetic and corrosion-resistant.

    “They made watches for me that would not freeze. They developed oils that wouldn’t freeze, watches that would become navigational instruments on my journeys. I only take one watch with me, and it needs to be able to do what I need. You need partners like that, those dedicated to innovation and precision, to be able to carry you through.”

    As part of this partnership, Panerai released the Submersible GMT Titanio Mike Horn Experience Edition watch, PAM01670, which comes with the chance to join Horn on an expedition to Bhutan. Other versions are for sale without the experience, but for explorers, the 30-piece limited edition 47mm titanium watch with Carbotech bezel and patented polarized date display unlocks adventurous new doors.

    [See also: The Elite Traveler Edit of the Top Watches of 2024]

    mike horn x panerai
    Panerai ambassador, Mike Horn /©Panerai

    According to Horn, living outside more than he has lived inside over the past 30 years has also given him keen insight into the environment and transformed him into an environmental advocate. “In five years, I spent just 32 days at home. I’ve seen the world change rapidly in 32 years of exploration,” he notes.

    One of the most shocking changes he’s witnessed involves seeing polar bears dying. “A polar bear can swim around 90 miles but can only walk 20 miles a day, so is more adapted to the ocean it lives in; it finds its food in the ocean and not on land. And when you see that you have a drowned polar bear that’s forced to swim, you’ve got to start asking yourself the hard questions. Today in the polar waters there are waves forming, because ice keeps the water calm. If the ice disappears and the wind blows over the water, that’s when you start creating waves.

    These waves are now eroding the coastlines of northern Alaska, Canada and Siberia. So now we put the polar bear in water, swimming through waves, and the ice is more than a hundred miles out from land. And imagine he’s hungry, he’s got to swim to ice he can’t get to; all of a sudden he decides to make a U-turn. He’s weak; he gets caught up in the waves; he drowns.” This and many other environmental experiences have inspired Horn to work harder to raise awareness. He has established initiatives like the Horn Foundation and has sailed the world carrying the sustainability message.

    [See also: Land Rover Defender OCTA Defies Expectations in South Africa]

    In fact, while Horn dreams of participating in the Paris to Dakar Rally, he refuses to contribute to pollution. “I decided to develop a car that doesn’t pollute at all. This led me to hydrogen as an energy source and for the past two-and-a-half years, I worked with a startup on hydrogen fuel cells to change mobility and to lead us away from fossil fuels. So not only do I explore, but I find that as I get older, I am more purposefully going into an industry where I can make a big change for everybody.”

    According to Horn: “There’s always got to be something that makes you want to wake up in the morning. That passion that I have for life and that zest I have, that energy wakes me up.”

    mikehorn.com, panerai.com

  • The Group Behind the World’s 50 Best Restaurants Will Debut a North America List This Year

    The Group Behind the World’s 50 Best Restaurants Will Debut a North America List This Year

    The inaugural ranking will be revealed at a live awards ceremony. The inaugural ranking will be revealed at a live awards ceremony.

  • Perini Navi’s New 190-Foot Superyacht Is Basically a 5-Star Spa for the High Seas

    Perini Navi’s New 190-Foot Superyacht Is Basically a 5-Star Spa for the High Seas

    “M/Y Amante” comes with a sauna, steam room, and more luxe amenities. “M/Y Amante” comes with a sauna, steam room, and more luxe amenities.