manuel cohen

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Mare de Deu de Montserrat, Montferri, Tarragona, Catalonia, Spain

Mare de Deu de Montserrat Montferri, or Sanctuary of the Virgin of Montserrat, view from above, a sanctuary and hermitage built 1926-28 and again from 1987, at Montferri, Tarragona, Catalonia, Spain. The church was designed by Josep Maria Jujol in local sand and cement, but when funds ran out the project was finished in the early 1990s by Joan Bassegoda i Nonell and Josep Cendros, and finally inaugurated in 1999. The building has been called 'the other Sagrada Familia' because of its organic forms and parabolic arches. Picture by Manuel Cohen

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Filename
DRN_LC19_SPAIN_MC149.jpg
Copyright
© Manuel Cohen
Image Size
5464x3640 / 8.3MB
www.manuelcohen.com
1920s 1926-28 1990s 20th century aerial photography aerial view Alt Camp architecture belief building catalan Catalonia Catalunya catenary cement christian christianity church color image colour image countryside Daniel Maria Vives day drone Europe European exterior faith field heritage hermitage history horizontal Iberia Iberian Peninsula Joan Bassegoda i Nonell Josep Cendros Josep Maria Jujol landscape looking down Madonna Mare de Deu de Montserrat Mare de Deu de Montserrat Montferri Mary Modernism Modernist Montferri Montserrat Moreneta organic outdoors outside parabolic arch religion religious roof sacred sanctuary Sanctuary of the Virgin of Montserrat sand shape Southern Europe Southern European Spain Spanish spire sunny Tarragona tourism tourist attraction UAV unmanned aerial vehicle view from above Virgin
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Mare de Deu de Montserrat Montferri, or Sanctuary of the Virgin of Montserrat, view from above, a sanctuary and hermitage built 1926-28 and again from 1987, at Montferri, Tarragona, Catalonia, Spain. The church was designed by Josep Maria Jujol in local sand and cement, but when funds ran out the project was finished in the early 1990s by Joan Bassegoda i Nonell and Josep Cendros, and finally inaugurated in 1999. The building has been called 'the other Sagrada Familia' because of its organic forms and parabolic arches. Picture by Manuel Cohen