Around 1577, El Greco—an outspoken, flamboyant Greek painter in his mid-30s—journeyed to Spain to seek his fortune. In time his adopted land would claim him as one of its greatest artists, and the identities of El Greco (The Greek) and Toledo would become closely linked.
Suspended between heaven and earth, Toledo—Spain's spiritual heart—has changed little from the day the Greek painter El Greco arrived in the 1570s.
—From "Toledo—El Greco's Spain Lives On," June 1982, National Geographic magazine
In Pamplona, Spain, tens of thousands of visitors come out for music, dancing, and bullfights. And the hardiest of souls brave the famous Running of the Bulls.
Suspended between heaven and earth, Toledo—Spain's spiritual heart—still retains the same classic charm that lured the famous painter El Greco to the area in the 1570s.