The Sagrada Familia has always existed somewhere between past and future.
For more than a century, it has stood in Barcelona as an unfinished masterpiece, instantly recognizable yet constantly evolving. Generations of visitors have discovered it in slightly different states, each version quietly shaping how the monument lives in memory.
And then, recently, something changed.
A New Silhouette for Barcelona

With the installation of the cross atop the central tower, the Sagrada Familia entered a new phase of its visual identity. The change is subtle at first, yet unmistakable once seen. The skyline shifts, the balance of the structure evolves, and the familiar image that many carried in their minds suddenly feels incomplete.
This moment is fascinating, because it reveals how quickly our perception adapts. What was, until recently, the “normal” Sagrada Familia already begins to feel like a past version.
When a Monument Changes, So Do Its Images
For artists working with real locations, this raises an unexpected question. What happens when the place itself changes?

Alecse, whose work is rooted in capturing the atmosphere of real places through a blend of photography, drawing and digital painting, has always approached the Sagrada Familia as a living subject rather than a fixed icon. His earlier Sagrada Familia Barcelona poster reflects a version of the basilica that many still recognize today, even as it slowly becomes part of the past.
Cha, through her own graphic language, has also explored the monument in her Barcelona Sagrada poster, translating its structure into bold shapes and colors that capture its presence more than its exact state of completion.
Both approaches now sit at an interesting intersection between memory and reality.
Old Views, Personal Memories
There is something deeply personal in the way we remember places. For many, the Sagrada Familia without the cross is not an “older” version, but simply the one they experienced.
Others may already feel that something is missing when looking at earlier images. And some will even prefer the previous silhouette, finding the new cross too dominant or too different from the image they had come to associate with Barcelona.
In that sense, the Sagrada Familia now exists in multiple visual timelines, each one equally valid depending on when and how it was experienced.
The Sagrada Familia 2026 Poster
This evolving reality naturally led to new creations.
Alecse’s Sagrada Familia 2026 poster captures the monument as it stands today, integrating the cross into a composition that remains faithful to his vintage-inspired style while reflecting the present state of Barcelona’s most iconic landmark.

Alongside it, the Barcelona Avenue Gaudí Sagrada Familia poster introduces a new perspective that many visitors know well, capturing the approach to the basilica through one of its most iconic viewpoints.
Framed by trees, cafés and the rhythm of daily life, this composition places the Sagrada Familia within the living city, reinforcing the connection between monument and street, and between architecture and experience.
These posters do not replace earlier versions. They extend the story.
A Monument Still in the Making
The Sagrada Familia is one of the very few major monuments in the world still under construction after more than 140 years. While other cathedrals such as Cologne Cathedral or Milan’s Duomo took centuries to complete, they eventually reached a definitive form.
The Sagrada Familia remains in motion.
This makes every image of it, whether a photograph or a travel poster, a snapshot of a specific moment in its history.
Looking Ahead to 2026

The year 2026 is expected to mark a major milestone, with the anticipated completion and official inauguration of the Sagrada Familia, a moment that could be accompanied by a papal visit to consecrate the basilica.
To mark this historic turning point, Cha is preparing a special collector edition within her City Lines collection, created to celebrate both the completion of the monument and this exceptional event.
This edition will be strictly limited to 100 prints across all 8 sizes, meaning that fewer than 15 prints will be available in each format.
As with many collector editions, the smaller sizes are often the first to sell out, making early reservation especially important for those who already have a specific format in mind.
Like the monument itself at this precise moment in time, this edition is designed to capture a once-in-a-generation milestone.
Between Memory and Evolution
The story of the Sagrada Familia reminds us that even the most iconic places are not fixed in time. They evolve, sometimes slowly, sometimes suddenly, and with them, the images we associate with them shift as well.
In the end, the question is not which version is “right”.
It is which version feels yours.





