Although there's not a lot of Modernism in Bern proper (although our parking garage was pleasantly Brutalist), we stopped in to visit Einstein's home when he wrote his first scientific papers and the baby-eating pedestal.
Albert Einstein lived in Bern for only a couple years, from 1902 to 1905, but his home, now known as the Einstein House, is preserved, largely because he spent his annus mirabilis (extraordinary year) in the apartment where he developed his theory relativity (and proved the existence of atoms and molecules [and other stuff along the way]) while he worked in a patent office.
Ye olde towne Bern is storybook gorgeous and a UNESCO-recognized locale. The apartment is on the third floor just off the main artery through the middle of town. The apartment is TINY considering he lived there with his first wife and infant son.
Just down the street is the Child Eater of Bern. This statue of a hungry dude eating a sack of babies is almost 500 years old, and no one knows what the heck it's supposed to mean. There are other, non-PC statues out and about the town.
a pissoir
No comments:
Post a Comment