The nightlife in Santa Ponsa is centred
around Calle Ramon de Montcada, where there is a great selection of bars, cafés and restaurants.
Not exact matches
Visitors to Temecula Valley will find the majority of wineries clustered east of I - 15 along and
around Rancho California and De Portola Roads, with some located along
Calle Contento as well.
From the time - tested traditions and ease - of - access of the Rancho California Wine Trail to
Calle Cotento Wine Trail's «Off - the - beaten - path» experience to De Portola Wine Trail, that meanders through Temecula Valley's equestrian area while showcasing wines styles from
around the world, there is a wine trail for every Temecula Valley visitor.
Starting at the south end of
Calle Ocho
around the intersection of SW 12th (yes, 12th can intersect 8th in Miami), you will pass cigar shops, a record store and a costume shop, but food is the real focus here.
You'll soon get into the swing of it all especially on
Calle Ocho (Southwest Eighth Street) on the main drag when all your senses become alert to the myriad Cuban experiences; the stucco houses, the street art, the sounds Samba music that escape from music stores and restaurants, rum is easy to come by, fruit markets energise the air with citrus aromas and food
around these parts is pretty rustic and includes a repertoire of chicken, rice and platanos — fried sweet bananas.
You came
around the bar each night and so did I. Funny to say «the bar» as if there were only one, when
Calle Calzada was nothing but, their plastic chairs bearing slogans for Toña and La Victoria, the national beers, flocked by children begging money for glue.
When walking
around Old Havana on
Calle Obispo, I noticed a small artisan market tucked between two old Spanish style buildings.
La
Calle was also very flexible about scheduling, and I was able to cancel or move
around lessons when there was an afternoon tour that conflicted with my classes, for example.
Hook up with Chepe Cletas for a bike tour of the city, walk
around the pedestrian street in the central area, pop into the market and eat at one of the vendors, check out the theater, dip into the organic farmer's market, and have a fancy dinner on
Calle 33.
Costa Teguise takes a back seat as far as nightlife is concerned, but there are a few karaoke and cocktail bars
around Playa de las Cucharas and
Calle las Olas.
Around 1984: A Look at Art in the Eighties will include work by: Dennis Adams, Judith Barry, Jean - Michel Basquiat, Ashley Bickerton, Dara Birnbaum, Alighiero Boetti, Sophie
Calle, Clegg & Guttmann, Francesco Clemente, Tony Cragg, Enzo Cucchi, Richard Deacon, Eugenio Dittborn, Jimmie Durham, Katharina Fritsch, Robert Gober, Group Material, Peter Halley, Keith Haring, Mona Hatoum, Jenny Holzer, Ilya Kabakov, Anish Kapoor, Tadashi Kawamata, Mike Kelley, Mary Kelly, William Kentridge, Anselm Kiefer, Jeff Koons, Barbara Kruger, Wolfgang Laib, Bertrand Lavier, Sherrie Levine, Reinhard Mucha, Matt Mullican, Juan Muñoz, Luigi Ontani, Adrian Piper, Richard Prince, David Salle, Julian Schnabel, Thomas Schütte, Cindy Sherman, Ettore Spalletti, Haim Steinbach, Thomas Struth, Rosemarie Trockel, Jan Vercruysse, Jeff Wall, and Krzysztof Wodiczko, among others.
Calle's work springs up
around «the association of an image and a narrative
around a game or autobiographical ritual, which strives to summon up the angst of absence while creating a relationship to others that is controlled by the artist,» as curator and art critic Christine Macel puts it.
This method of selection is well and truly part of Sophie
Calle's artistic approach; from
around 200 replies, she chose Daniel Buren to assist with her project: Take care of yourself.»