Archive for September, 2007

30
Sep

The Return of Aeneas

Vittorio Sermonti reads the Aeneid at Rome's Capitoline Museums

Writer, poet, essayist and translator Vittorio Sermonti is hugely popular in Italy, thanks in part to his insightful commentary on Dante’s Divine Comedy, but even more because of the dramatic readings of Dante he’s done in Italy’s most impressive historic monuments over the course of the past 15 years.

His readings of the Inferno, the Purgatorio, and the Paradiso in places like the Pantheon in Rome, the Cenacolo di Santa Croce in Florence, the Basilica di Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan, and the Church of San Francesco in Ravenna have attracted more than 150,000 listeners.

Now, in association with Telecom Progetto Italia, Sermonti is on stage at Rome’s Capitoline Museums, helping Romans get back in touch with the very earliest history of their city, by reading his own translation the Aeneid to an enthusiastic audience.

The Aeneid, a Latin epic written by Virgil in the 1st century BC, tells the legendary story of Aeneas, a Trojan who travelled to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the Roman people.

Sermonti’s readings of the 12 books of the epic is being held in the Exedra of Marcus Aurelius, a new addition to the Capitoline Museums. The readings began on September 18th and will take place every night at 9:00pm (except Sundays and Mondays) until October 19th.

Can’t make it every night? Not in Rome but wish you could attend? Video recordings of each evening’s readings are available on the Telecom Progetto Italia site.

30
Sep

Humorous Interlude

Frazz Cartoon

Frazz cartoon by Jef Mallett.

30
Sep

Airing Out History

Colosseum

An Italian publishing house, Laterza, is currently sponsoring a series of open-air public history lessons given by some of Italy’s leading scholars and held in the context of Rome’s most famous landmarks.  Only 1,000 seats are  available for each of the lessons, although maxiscreens have been set up in the street for those who don’t manage to get a seat.

On Friday 28 September, crowds gathered in Rome’s beautiful Piazza del Campidoglio to hear Luciano Canfora give a lecture titled, “The Senators.”  His hour and 1/2 contribution to the edification of modern Romans was followed up lectures by Alessandro Portelli on the bombing of San Lorenzo and Antonio Forcellino on Michelangelo.

Saturday 29 September saw enthusiastic listeners clamoring to hear another series of lectures, this time given in front of the Colosseum. Superstar archaeologist, Andrea Carandini, spoke about ancient imperial palaces ranging from those of the Roman kings to those of the emperors.  He was followed by Andrea Giardini who spoke on gladiators and Giovanni Brizzi who presented a lecture on the Roman army.

Tonight, Sunday 30 September, the lecture series moves to Castel Sant’Angelo, where audiences will be treated to a talk on the Jewish Ghetto given by Anna Foa, another on multiethnic Rome by Alessandro Barbero, and a final presentation on the construction of Saint Peter’s Basilica by Antonio Pinelli.

A similar lecture series held in 2006 was a surprise hit, proving that Romans are truly engaged and interested in their history.  Professors gave public lessons at the Auditorium-Parco della Musica on Sunday mornings between October and March. Up to 5,000 people queued in the cold for the 1,200 tickets available for each of the lessons, each of which focused on a single crucial day in the history of the city. For those unable to hear the lectures (or those who simply want to relive them), the 2006 presentations are available for download on Apple’s iTunes and on the website of the organizing publishing house, Laterza.  About 355,000 people have already downloaded parts of the 2006 lecture series.

28
Sep

Photo Friday: Performance Trash

Performance Trash.  A Photo by Susan Sanders.

It’s Photo Friday once again and today Susan Sanders presents us with a photo titled Performance Trash. The street performer shown in this photo has been refining his act over the course of the past months in Rome and he seems now to have perfected it. He’s managed to paint his shoes, his suit, and his skin the exact color of characteristic trash cans (and the cobblestone street) against which he slumps in hope that we might toss him a coin or two for his efforts.

Susan often photographs Rome’s lively street life and you can see more of her photographs by visiting her Rome With A View website.

28
Sep

My Life as a Dog

b.pet furniture for cats and dogs

At this months’s SuperZoo pet industry show, the Milanese firm b.pet presented a luxurious and high-design line of furniture for the cats and dogs. Based on well-known furniture designs, the ultra-modern line will let your pet recline in style alongside you.

Super cool is the limited edition Bubble Gold bed (below, left). It’s plated with 24 karat gold and includes a silk cushion stuffed with down. Perfect for the canine or feline that has everything. They’re only making 99 of these so you’d better act now if you’ve got a pet that needs a little extra pampering.

b.pet furniture for cats and dogs

28
Sep

Whatever Floats Your Boat

Vascabarca by Antonio Lupi

Gotta get one of these!  Anne and Parick Poirier have designed a boat-shaped bathtub, called Vascabarca, for Antonio Lupi.  They’re only making 10 of these, each of them carved from a single monlithic block of stone, and they can be personalized with your name on the stern.

Imagine Styx playing in the background as you ride the bubbly waves in this little dinghy.  “Come sail away, come sail away, come and sail away with me…”

27
Sep

An Interview with Photographer Jersey Walz

Rome's Cloaca Maxima by Jersey Walz

Above: Along the Tiber. Rome, Italy. 2006.

Today Eternally Cool pays homage to a young artist, Jersey Walz, whose vision of the world was shaped by the childhood she spent in Rome. Trained in both the visual arts and in writing, Jersey has spent the past years taking stunning photos of the places she’s traveled and lived, as well as insightful portraits of artisans, writers, family, and friends.

We’re honored that Jersey agreed to our interview and is allowing us to feature her work on Eternally Cool for her photographs are artful exercises in stillness that compel us to look at our surroundings more carefully. Perhaps this is because the visual world that Jersey presents to her viewers is one that looks familiar but that feels far removed from daily existence. She extracts the hurry and frenzy of daily life from her photographic compositions, so that they beckon their viewers to sit quietly with one another, to perform tasks with concentrated deliberation, and to examine closely the rich shapes and patterns created by the world.

Our interview with Jersey set us to thinking about her particular way of seeing the world and we were struck by her response when asked about a childhood in which she moved to Rome with her family and was faced with the task of negotiating the divide between American and Italian culture. Jersey described her experience in Italy as being both a part of and apart from my surroundings, a participant and, at the same moment, an observer.” The perception is one that she brilliantly transfers into the photographic medium, for her images paradoxically offer intimate insights of a world seen from afar.

Jersey has shown her work in a variety of group exhibitions in New York City and her photos have been featured in The World of Interiors Magazine as well as in SOMA Magazine. In 2006 she traveled to Ireland to photograph Irish artisans for a book, Cottage Industry, by Betsy Klein. You can see more of her photographs and contact her about purchasing images at her website.

When did you start taking photographs?
I started photographing in college. Although I went in as a creative writing major, by the end of the semester I was spending most of my time in the darkroom, weekends down in New York City, just wandering around with a 35mm. It seemed the best way to address my new surroundings. It was a bit of a culture shock returning to the United States after growing up in Rome. I had a hard time readjusting, especially to American college life.

What inspired you to pursue this as a career path?
I submitted work to group shows while still in school. I sold a few prints to collectors and started working for an artist/photographer. I also did a bit of editorial work and commissioned portraits. About a year and a half ago I had the opportunity to photograph for a book on Irish Artisans. I traveled with the writer for a month in Ireland making portraits of knife makers, basket weavers, butchers, roof thatchers, oatcake makers, in their workshops, homes, stores. This led to other things. I returned to Ireland to re-photograph one of our subjects for The World of Interiors magazine. I just spent the past summer photographing around the Great Lakes and in the Midwest. Fortunately, I work at Cooper Union, a college in New York City, and have the summers off. More than anything, I have made photographing a priority. Everything else just falls into place.

Portraits of Irish Craftspeople by Jersey Walz

Above left: Oat Cake Maker. 2006. Above right: Goat Cheese Maker. 2006.

What’s your intent as a photographer? Are there specific things you like to show your viewers or specific ideas that you want to convey?
A lot of my original intent had to do with my first experience of photographs. These were the family albums on our coffee table and they were the images I had in mind when I began to make my own.

I have been more recently interested in environmental portraiture. The photographs I was making around the Great Lakes described the activities that take place around these bodies of water, and people I established a relationship with on my travels and their lifestyles. I spent sometime with a woodchopper in Duluth, Minnesota. I was living in a barn with my great aunt on lake Ontario.

You’ve photographed a number of renowned authors. Is that a particular interest of yours? Do you write yourself or have you studied literature?

I spent a few weeks in Cape Cod one summer. The Vonneguts are old family friends, and Kurt had come up for a long weekend to visit his daughter and grandchildren. I was making portraits and enjoying my time out of the city, swimming, bike riding, exploring the sand dunes, eating tomato sandwiches and corn on the cob. Kurt would sit on the porch and smoke, tell stories. He was very impressed with my 4 by 5 wooden field camera and kept calling me Matthew Brady. He agreed to sit for me.

The following academic year I was enrolled in an advanced poetry critique/lecture series class with several poet laureates at my university. My advisor, having seen the portrait of Kurt, asked if I would photograph the writers that were lecturing. (There was also a fiction series) We were renovating the creative writing conference room and she wanted to hang their pictures on the classroom walls. I photographed poets Billy Collins, Robert Hass, Charles Simic as well as the writers Jamaica Kincaid, Tom Wolfe and Michael Cunningham.

Portrait of Kurt Vonnegut by Jersey Walz

Above: Kurt Vonnegut. 2004.

Do you think that writing and photography are in any way similar?
Both photography and writing have been important creative outlets for me. As a child I wrote what I refer to as memory poems. Most of these were an extension of a collection of manila envelopes I had kept in a box, short poems and memories, all revolving around my mother, who died when I was seven. I felt an urgency to record my life and the memory of experience. At some point, photography replaced writing as this tool.

How do you go about creating a portrait? What inspires you?
I photograph with a 4 by 5 view camera. Photographing with this camera is no casual activity. To make a portrait involves a certain amount of participation from the subject, some time to set up, frame, level, and focus. If I am lucky, I am in the right place at the right time, or rather, a beautiful place in nice light with a willing or group of willing subjects.

I am inspired by the ambition of photographers like August Sander and his “People of the 20th Century,” his cataloging of German society with all its bakers, beggars, actors, politicians, students. By the photographs of Harry Callahan, which describe the autobiographical facts of his existence, the integration of life and art, the “where and how he lived, what he saw and how he passed his days.”

Dante in Sabina by Jersey Walz

Above: Dante in Tree. Sabina, Italy. 2004.

You moved to Rome when you were quite young and lived there until you went to college. Are you conscious of the influence of the city on your artistic and creative vision?
My father won the Rome prize through the American Academy in Rome. He decided, after his one-year fellowship, not to return to the United States. My sister and I were placed into Italian public school. I was not only studying the Pythagorean theorem and the 2nd World War, I was studying them in the wrong language. Within a year I was fluent. In two, I was bilingual and better at grammar then some of my Italian classmates. This experience was very significant to my development both as a writer and a photographer. Not only because of my new sense of language, but an understanding of a whole other set of values, unspoken values that can only be absorbed and appreciated from this total immersion into a culture. Along with this, was the unique role of being both a part of and apart from my surroundings, a participant and, at the same moment, an observer.

Compared to other places you’ve photographed, what do you think makes Rome unique?
The way one period of time sits with another, that a new building might find its home next to a column from two thousand years ago. This is a rich and complex juxtaposition: the sensuous delight of the city and the weight of its history. Rome is provincial. The streets are a wealth of small dramas and gestures.

Lunch in Rome by Jersey Walz

Above: Lunch. Rome. 2004.

Enjoyed this interview? Read other articles about visual artists Pattie Cronin and John Kelly on Eternally Cool.

26
Sep

Cafe Doppio

Julian Swin Espresso Table & Chairs

Our world is one of constantly shifting and changing images, so it’s rare to find an industrial product that’s kept the same shape and appearance for over 70 years - but that’s exactly what the Moka Express has done. From the time of its invention in 1933 to the present day, over 200 million Moka Express coffeemakers have been sold - and every one of them looks the same.

In the 1930s, on the shore of Lago Maggiore, craftsmen Alfonso Bialetti came up with the idea for the Moka Express while watching the workings of a rudimentary washing machine made from a hermetically sealed boiler and a simple metal clothes basket. Less interested in clean clothes than in a good cup of coffee, Bialetti adapted the idea, replacing the clothes basket with a coffee-filed filter. In this single stroke of genius, he invented the Moka.

Since its creation, the Moka has become the world’s most famous coffee pot - even being cited as such in the Guinness Book of World Records. Its fame is especially widespread in Italy, where statistics say that 90% of Italian families own a Moka.

Now, designer Julian Lwin pays homage to the Moka Express with his Dr. Octagon Espresso table and chairs - and we love them. While opening a coffee bar isn’t currently part of our plan for the Eternally Cool Empire, we’re definitely keeping these on the list of necessary bar furniture should coffee shopping should find its way into our future.
Table & chairs image via Mocoloco.com

24
Sep

TAD Concept Store

TAD Concept Store, Rome

In recent years, Rome’s Via del Babuino has become the coolest place to shop in the Eternal City. This may be because the narrow road is nonetheless a major thoroughfare, leading from Piazza del Popolo to the Spanish Steps. Or it may be that the reopening of the Hotel de Russie at one end of Via del Babuino has brought an influx of super hipsters to this part of the city.

However it happened, there’s little doubt that Via del Babuino is the place to you want to be if you’re in the mood for a bit of upscale shopping. And the hippest store on the street is indubitably the TAD Concept Store.

The mission of TAD appears to be that of being everything to everyone, and as such it’s really a small scale department store that carries only the finest in high design furniture, fashion, food, fragrances and flowers.

Within its sprawling but minimalist confines, TAD has a hair salon by Roberto D’Antonio and floral stand by Alessandra Rovati Vitali. There’s a café that prepares gourmet lunches and drinks and an international fragrance counter offers hard-to-find scents by Jo Malone and Miller Harris as well as local Italian perfumers. Music lovers are delighted to discover an in-house mix-ologist and good selection of lounge and house music. And while the usual big fashion houses get a bit of play at TAD, you’ll also find harder-to-come by labels like Proenza Schuler, Balenciaga and Hussein Chalaya.

TAD Concept Store. Via del Babuino 155/a. Rome. Phone: 06 36 95 131.  There’s also a TAD in Milan. Via Statuto 12. Milan. Phone: 02 655 06 731.

Rome's TAD Concept Store

24
Sep

The Devil Made Me Do It

Taverna Lucifero

How is it that no one’s shown up for Leonardo’s Last Supper? It seems they’ve all been tempted away by the sinful and gluttonous desire for a meal at Rome’s Taverna Lucifero. The devil must have prepared some pretty fabulous fare to bust up that apostolic guest list!

We haven’t been to this restaurant near Rome’s Campo dei Fiori, but in 2004 it was featured in a review by Irin Carmon, a Let’s Go writer and student travel columnist at the Boston Globe:

In search of citadels of the sinful and the sacred in the Eternal City, I came across Taverna Lucifero, a restaurant on a hidden block off Campo dei Fiori. Locals, brandishing cigarettes and attitudes that could be described only as devil-may-care, pack this unpretentious place, and are welcomed with a kiss by owner Francisco Perlini. It took some persuading to get a table in winter; would-be customers in high season are advised to call two weeks in advance. Who knew Lucifer’s den would be so hard to get into? Some clues as to why: fresh pasta, swathed in cream and topped with freshly-brushed truffles, homemade limoncello, and 400 varieties of wine.

LS&Partners in Rome are the creators of this humorous ad campaign The Creative Director was Luisa Scarlata, the Art Director was Simone Santese. The Copywriter was Daniele Papa and the ad was first published in September 2007




 

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