Move seamlessly between the intimate rural enclaves and the commanding presence of the Palau Ducal.
With evocative storytelling and researched insights, this guide reveals not just what exists, but how to truly see it.
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Located in the church of San Bartolomé Church in Jávea, the altarpiece, completed in 1741 and destroyed in 1936 during the upheavals of the Spanish Civil War, was a notable example of Spanish High Baroque religious art.
DISCOVER THE HIDDEN STORIES OF JÁVEA
Walk through Jávea again, and nothing will look the same.
This anthology uncovers the hidden layers of Jávea, where Roman history, lost monuments, mysterious ships, and encounters involving Joaquín Sorolla reveal a deeper story beneath the surface.
Because Jávea’s true identity lives in what most people never notice.
IN 1901, PABLO PICASSO was barely twenty years old, brilliant, ambitious, and already restless. He had left Spain to chase success in Paris, where modern art was reinventing itself in the cafés and galleries of Montmartre. But that same year, his closest friend, Carlos Casagemas, took his own life, a loss that left Picasso heartbroken and profoundly changed. Standing between youthful optimism and personal grief, he created Child with a Dove, a painting that captures both innocence and the first shadow of sorrow.
DURING THE PERIOD of the great Valencian painter and humanist Joaquín Sorolla (1863-1923), children's health and social problems were an important issue, and his artwork reflects the harsh realities faced by the most vulnerable members of society. Sorolla's compassionate and often stark portrayals of sick or impoverished children, such as in "Sad Inheritance" (1899), served as a powerful form of social commentary, bringing to light the devastating effects of diseases like polio.
El Beso by Bernardo Ferrándiz Bádenes, a painting that captures all the warmth, tradition, and storytelling of the costumbrista style.