Jeanne had arranged for us to go up into the mountains above Carrara to see the marble quarries. Which, in a way, completes the picture. You see the marble in the city — in façades, in churches, in sculptures that seem almost detached from their origin. And then you come here, where the origin is anything but abstract. Whole mountains being cut into. It is striking — not just the scale of the operation today, but the continuity. That this has been going on since Roman times. That the same mountains have been opened, cut, carved, and transported — long before modern machinery made it easier to imagine. Blocks of stone that would eventually become something like Michelangelo’s Pietà or Moses once started here, embedded in this landscape. And still do. There is something almost difficult to grasp in the idea that entire sections of a mountain can be removed, piece by piece, and redistributed across the world as architecture and art. Extraction turned into permanence. But standing there, it is also hard not to notice the reverse. That permanence, at scale, leaves its mark. The mountains are no longer quite what they were. Perhaps that is always the trade-off — when something is made to last elsewhere, something changes irreversibly at the source.

05/03/2026 20:05:57


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