Archive for April 13th, 2007

13
Apr

Patricia Cronin: Lost & Found

Patricia Cronin Diptych

New York artist Patricia Cronin is currently working and living in Rome. While in the Eterna, Cronin is spending her time exploring the life and the artistic works of Harriet Hosmer, a 19th-century American sculptor who moved to Rome in the 1850s, when she was just 22 years old. In the course of her highly successful career, Hosmer became known as the first professional woman sculptor: she was critically acclaimed and her works were widely exhibited. Despite all this, Hosmer’s stunning Neoclassical marble sculptures are largely unknown.

Cronin has vowed to change that situation and has spent the past nine months working on the Harriet Hosmer Catalogue Raisonne. Being an acclaimed artist herself, Patricia wasn’t content to produce a photographic catalog of Hosmer’s work. Rather, she’s chosen to represent her Neoclassical colleague’s marble sculptures with a series of monochromatic watercolors. The results are stunning - Cronin’s watercolors showcase the luminosity of marble while giving a sense of the weight and the volume of each of Hosmer’s stone figures.

The creation of a Catalogue Raisonne for Harriet Hosmer is a laudable task that will help to close the gender gap that currently characterizes our understanding of American Neoclassical sculptors working in Rome. Furthermore, Cronin’s self-assigned task of recording each and every one of Hosmer’s works with her own hands presents a particularly interesting challenge: The Queen of Naples, a life-size marble sculpture that contemporaries considered to be Hosmer’s crowning achievement, is missing. Only written descriptions of the work remain and so Cronin has spent months grappling with the problem of how to paint what she cannot see. The solution she’s settled on is that of representing the missing sculpture as a series of haunting apparitions whose forms can barely be discerned. It’s a brilliant move. The technique makes Cronin’s Queen of Naples paintings utterly compelling for they force the viewer to contemplate the transitory nature of all things - even (or especially) marble sculptures which usually seem so very permanent and unchangeable.

How did a contemporary American artist become interested in the work of a Neoclassical sculptor like Harriet Hosmer? Thoughts of life, death, and change over time brought Cronin and Hosmer together. In 2002, Patricia unveiled a 3-ton marble mortuary sculpture that she made to mark the grave in which she and her partner Deborah Kass will someday be laid to rest. Called Memorial to a Marriage, the widely-celebrated sculpture is carved of Carrara marble in the manner of a 19th century sepulcher. Therein lies the moment at which Cronin was introduced to Hosmer. And one can only imagine that it must have been love at first sight, for despite the boundaries of space and time that separate them, Cronin and Hosmer are a perfect match.

Patricia Cronin is represented by the Claire Oliver Gallery in New York. Through July her work can be seen by appointment at the American Academy in Rome: 06 581 2674.

13
Apr

Don’t Go Breakin’ My Egg

Egg Mania

Look closely and you’ll see that this giant chocolate Easter egg is embellished with an image of the Temple of Castor and Pollux in the Roman Forum. Old meets new in the most unlikely places in the Eternal City.

If you didn’t get enough chocolate at Easter time, make a beeline to Valzani, an old-fashioned chocolate store in Trastevere at Via del Moro 37a/b. They’ve been in business since 1925 and that’s given them a lot of time to figure out what to do with chocolate Easter Eggs that didn’t find a home before the holiday. Break them! Sell them! Eat them!

Broken Easter Eggs

13
Apr

Eros: Love Among the Ruins

Entry to the Eros Exhibit

Sex, drugs, and rock-and-roll in the ancient world? You bet! The god in charge of (almost) all of them was Eros or Cupid, the love child of Venus, the goddess of lust and sexuality.

With his cherubic face and his teenage sense of humor, Cupid was a god who spent most of his time doing the bidding of his mother, Venus. In fulfilling her lusty missions, his weapons of choice were the bow and arrow, and, to his credit, the teen god shot his darts with uncanny accuracy. In fact, ancient Romans feared being the target of Cupid’s arrows - and for good reason. His quiver was filled with both gold- and lead-tipped projectiles and both types of arrows left their victims utterly unable to control their emotions.

Wounded by the immortal marksman’s golden-tipped arrows, one fell into a life of blissful romance and true love. But that almost never happened. More commonly, Cupid fired off blunt, leaden projectiles. Those struck by the dreaded lead darts were destined to chase wildly after the very person who would be utterly repulsed by their affections.

Want to know more about erotic love in the ancient world? Get thee to the Colosseum. Until the middle of September an exhibit titled Eros showcases Cupid and his mother Aphrodite or Venus. On display are painted vases, sculptures, and frescoes that illustrate ancient amor in all its glory.

13
Apr

Saints gone postal

San Dalo & Dwich

Postcards designed by the Armando Testa firm (ostensibly) to promote good behavior in church.

San Dalo, patron saint of summer footwear, reminds churchgoers that they should be properly attired, while San Dwich, about to garnish his panino with ketchup, admonishes the faithful that gum chewing and eating are not acceptable in church.

San Itario, patron saint of hygiene, pulls a toilet flush chain, suggesting that unnecessary noise should be avoided, while San Gria, with her pitcher of fruited-wine, conveys the message that the pious should attend mass only when sober.

By ADCI Promocards. Postcards are distributed free of charge in participating restaurants, bars, and pizzerias throughout Italy.

Art direction by Laura Sironi, text by Maria Meioli, and creative direction by Michele Mariani.

Sans Itario & Gria

13
Apr

Hipsters, Flipsters, and Finger-Poppin’ Daddies…

Lord Buckley: His Royal Hipness

His Royal Hipness, Lord Buckley, was an eccentric cat who made his mark in the 1940s and 1950s by recasting familiar tales in ultra-cool language. Jesus became “The Nazz,” Gandhi “The Hip Gan,” - even Nero and Marc Antony got all hip-hopped when he talked about them.

Buckley took on the subject of Roman antiquity several times, turning the well-known stories of Nero and of Caesar’s funeral into his own modern masterpieces. In his remake of Marc Antony’s funeral oration for Caesar (as written by Shakespeare) the funked-out phrase “Hipsters, flipsters and finger-poppin’ daddies: knock me your lobes“replaces the Bard’s “Friends, Romans, Countrymen lend me your ears.” Buckley’s commentary on Nero - the fun-loving, bad-boy emperor of the first century BC - is just as brilliant. Here’s an excerpt:

Man, you don’t know who Nero is. Let me Hip You! Nero was one of the wildest, gonest, freakiest studs who ever stomped through the pages of history. He’s the kind of a cat that balled every big swingin’ main day breeze, all the time every day. And the chicks were jumpin’ and the juice was flyin’ and the band was blowin’ and Nero havin’ himself a fine time, continual! This cat balled Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. In fact he balled so crazy and so far out that occasionally he get his kick warehouse so full of kicks he can’t tick no more kicks in, and when there ain’t no place to put ‘em the po’ cat get hung. But he ain’t hung for long, cause he whip out his scratch pad, which the cat always carried with him and he write on the “O-bob-a-do, O-bop-a-day, you wid me, and I’m wid you,” and he showed it to the Head Pretorian Stud, and the Head Pretorian Stud take one look and his eyes light up and he say: “Man, dig what this genius done put down! This cat is pushin’ Shakespeare!

Buckley recast the past in his own terms - and he made it fun! Today he’s often called the first rapper for his frantic spray of black street ling, jazz-speak, and hipster jive. But in his own day, the Lord of Hipdom was a bit too weird to be more than a cult. Nonetheless his comic sense of cool influenced many performers, including Lenny Bruce and Bob Dylan.

Click here to read the Lord’s brilliant adaptation of Marc Antony’s famous speech and here to read more of his hipped out version of Nero’s life.

13
Apr

The Roman Brand of Cool

Models @ the Pantheon

From past to present and from Caesar to Prada, Rome is a city ruled by design.

Rome has always had style. We can be grateful to the Romans for fabulous inventions like cappuccino, cleavage in advertising, fringe haircuts, open-toed lion-headed sandals, pasta with tomato sauce, clear bra straps, gelato, Valentino, and Nutella. And, of course, we must not forget that the Romans can also be credited with the development of such entertaining diversions as the dolce vita, the Sunday passeggiata, summer at the beach, Spaghetti westerns, soccer drama, and fountain diving in evening wear (never mind a great deal of Western Civilization).

Called the Eternal City because its history cuts across millenia of time, Rome is old but it’s also global and cosmopolitan. The Ancient temples, Medieval towers, Renaissance paintings, and Baroque churches that litter the streets provide provide a breathtakingly scenic backdrop against which today’s emerging trends, cutting-edge fashions, and innovative cultural ideas are showcased.

How to keep track of all that? Visit this site regularly! EternallyCool.net is Rome’s hip hub - here you can keep up with all that’s happening in the world’s oldest and coolest city. From art to food, from fashion to furniture, from advertising to literature, and from street life to art exhibits, we’ll keep you up on everything that makes Rome eternally cool.