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00:00 Why visit Valencia in Venezuela?
00:51 Works by Carlos Cruz Diez in Valencia.
03:54 Chromatic induction by Carlos Cruz Diez.
05:06 Light traps according to Carlos Cruz Diez.
06:40 Tram ride in Valencia.
08:03 Macaw Indian Sculpture in Valencia.
09:30 Gothic Church of Valencia, Venezuela.
11:16 Venezuelan Baseball Museum.
11:48 Who was Alejandro Carrasquel?
12:11 Who was David Concepción?
12:23 Who was Luis Aparicio?
13:06 Who was Oswaldo Guillén?
13:27 Who was Bob Abreu?
13:38 Who founded the Venezuelan baseball museum?
14:46 Hall of Fame in Valencia.
15:53 Who was the mother Carmen Rendiles?
19:18 Relic of mother Carmen Rendiles.
It always mortifies me that Venezuelans boast of the benefits of our nature, because absolutely… they are a gift from God. We have no merit. Rather what we have done is destroy so much of that.
So I want to do a series of urban treasures from Venezuelan cities. Works made by our people, our creators. local talent. Today I want to start with Valencia, the capital of the Carabobo state, by the hand of our friend Eduardo Monzón, a journalist, who has been determined to show Valencia to the people of Valencia. This was a provincial city that became industrial, starting with the automobile industry that settled in the outskirts.
The debacle of the current regime made all the assembly companies flee, and now Valencia is trying to find its origins. Restore its values. Delve into its essence. Then it is fascinating to see the work of the master Cruz Diez in this city, not only in the building of the Association of Executives of Valencia, with a roof that is called the Sistine Chapel of businessmen, but also in a building on Avenida Bolívar and its extraordinary work in the roundabout of Guaparo, icon of the capital of Carabobo.
In the heart of the center there is a little-visited Gothic church, with more than 20 stained glass windows that illuminate it while the faithful pray because the Blessed Sacrament is always there. Continuing with religious reasons, the first degree relic of Blessed Carmen Rendiles is in Valencia. It is the little finger of her right hand and rests in the chapel of the Betania College, founded by her in 1954.
Valencia also offers a tram, a private initiative, one of the most pleasant that runs through the city through the center, while its owners tell the story of corners and urbanizations. Thus we arrive at the Carabobo urbanization, the second to be built in Valencia, where Alejandro Colina designed a square to pay homage to the Guacamayo (macaw) Indian. He is the same author of the statue of Maria Lionza, but the Indian was earlier.
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