I have travelled through Spain twice before, though both journeys unfolded beneath the hurried rhythm of organised tours, forever shadowed by timetables, raised umbrellas, and the quiet anxiety of not falling behind the group. Even now, I sometimes wish I had wandered more slowly through those cities alone — lingering in forgotten alleyways, sitting longer beneath cathedral shadows, allowing the soul of each place to reveal itself at its own unhurried pace instead of being measured in scheduled stops and departing buses.
Like every tourist intoxicated by Spain’s endless theatre of light and stone, I took countless street photographs almost instinctively, snapping fragments of plazas, balconies, monks, old facades and passing strangers without truly understanding what stood before me. Only years later did I revisit those images carefully, discovering details I had completely overlooked at the time, as though the photographs themselves had matured quietly in storage while waiting for me to finally see them properly.
One such place was the Hospital de los Venerables Sacerdotes in Seville, hidden within the winding labyrinth of the old Jewish quarter of Santa Cruz. At the time, it had simply seemed another beautiful Andalusian building passing by the lens in the golden heat of afternoon. Yet later, reading about its history, the place unfolded into something far richer and more hauntingly elegant.
Built in the seventeenth century during the height of the Spanish Baroque era, the hospital was established as a sanctuary for elderly and impoverished priests who could no longer serve the Church. Behind its modest exterior lies a tranquil courtyard framed by white arches and sunlit galleries, where fountains murmur softly beneath orange trees and the scent of old stone lingers in the air. The chapel inside is astonishingly ornate, its domed ceiling covered with frescoes and gilded details that seem to dissolve upward into heaven itself. Paintings by Murillo and other masters once adorned its walls, surrounding the ageing clergy with beauty in their final years.
There is something deeply Spanish about the place — a fusion of devotion, grandeur, melancholy and art existing side by side. Looking back now through those old photographs, I realise I had unknowingly captured more than architecture. I had preserved fragments of memory from a civilisation layered with centuries of faith, conquest, splendour and decline, all hidden quietly behind the streets I once hurried through too quickly to fully understand.
Panasonic G9
Leica 12-60mm f2.8-4
Linking to Sign2



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