Archive for October, 2007



21
Oct

Tim Robbins in Rome

Tim Robbins in Rome

Via Il Messaggero:

Amidst the glam and the glitter of the 2007 Rome Film Festival, some stars have taken a bit of time off to enjoy the Eternal City.  Oscar-winner Tim Robbins - in Rome to present his new film “Noise” -  took a few moments from his day to help direct traffic in Piazza Venezia.  In the company of Fabio Grillo, a member of the Polizia force, Robbins climbed atop an elevated pedestal at the center of Rome’s most trafficked piazza, where Grillo provided the actor with a crash-course in the graceful arm movements that direct the five lanes of intersecting traffic that move through the piazza.

Robbins’s day in the Eternal City continued with a visit to Mayor Veltroni in Piazza Campidoglio.  Having never before seen the piazza with the equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius at its center, he exclaimed, “Mamma mia!  Che bello!

20
Oct

Paint the Town Red: Futurist Vandals at the Trevi

Via ANSA & the AP:

Yesterday, October 19th, the waters of Rome’s famous Trevi Fountain turned blood red when a man threw paint into the basin in a bizarre act of vandalism apparently inspired by the Futurists of the early 20th century.

The man, reportedly wearing a beret and a light-colored jacket, struck at around 4.30 pm and then disappeared into the crowd of tourists, leaving behind a pile of leaflets. The fountain, which re-uses the same water in a continuous cycle, soon started spurting red water into the air from its jets, providing an unprecedented spectacle which tourists immediately began photographing. Police arrived and technicians briefly shut off the water before restoring a clear flow.

Experts said the baroque fountain was not permanently damaged and the marble statues depicting the sea deity Neptune on his chariot had not absorbed the color.

“There shouldn’t be any relevant damage,” said Eugenio La Rocca, superintendent for Rome’s monuments.

The news agency ANSA reported that a box was found near the fountain containing leaflets by a group that claimed responsibility for the act. The leaflets found beside the fountain claimed that the coloring of the monument had been carried out by ‘FTM Futurist Action 2007,’ a group which has not been heard of before.

The leaflets state that the group aims to battle against “everything and everyone with a spirit of healthy violence” and to turn this “grey bourgeois society into a triumph of color.” As well, the leaflets proclaim that the red paint was a protest for expenses incurred in organizing the Rome Film Festival and symbolically referred to the event’s red carpet.

To read more about Rome’s Trevi Fountain on Eternally Cool, click here. Or click here to admire Susan Sanders’ Trevi Shoppers photograph.

20
Oct

Photo Saturday: Trevi Shopper

Trevi Shopper, a photo of Rome by Susan Sanders

It was a busy day yesterday and we missed Photo Friday, so we’re making it up to you by featuring one of Susan Sanders fabulous images of Rome today, Saturday.

Taken in 2000, Trevi Shopper is a study in the arts of street shopping and fashionable self-presentation. In Rome, the bella figura is everything! Though it looks like all parties in this photo are entirely uninterested in the cheap souvenirs on display in front of the Trevi Fountain, in actuality, an intense negotiation over prices was underway when Susan snapped this shot.

Susan offers us the Trevi Shopper at the very moment that the Trevi Fountain is very much in our minds. Yesterday, vandals dyed the waters of the Trevi red. We’ve got that story here on Eternally Cool, as well as a longer article, called Trevi-Mania, that delves into the fountain’s history, asking why the monument has achieved such worldwide fame.

To see more of Susan’s photographs of Rome, visit her photo blog, Rome With A View.

20
Oct

Trevi-Mania: The Triumph of Water

Trevi Fountain

What accounts for the fame of the Trevi Fountain? Since its appearance in Fellini’s 1959 film “La Dolce Vita”, when Anita Ekberg plunged so seductively into the fountain, the Trevi has been Rome’s most iconic image. Today the site is on every tourist’s must see list and is usually packed with visitors who throw coins into its crystal blue waters in order to insure their return to the Eternal City.

Yet visitors exuberantly enacting their own version of la dolce vita - carefully posing for cameras while tossing coins over their shoulders - often miss the real drama taking place on the Trevi’s facade - the triumphal arrival of water to Rome’s city center.

Anita Ekberg in the Trevi Fountain

The waters that run through the Trevi are deserving of celebration, for they they enter the city (even today) thanks to the astounding architectural achievements of the ancient Romans. In 19 BC, Augustus’s right-hand man, Marcus Agrippa, sought fresh water for his soldiers. Legend says that his search led him to a beautiful Roman maiden who showed him a small spring of wonderfully fresh water some 16 kilometers outside Rome. With the spring revealed, an aqueduct was constructed, and the waters were channeled into the city. Today Agrippa’s aqueduct continues to supply the Trevi Fountain with water, and it also supplies the Fountain of the Leaky Boat (Barcaccia) at the foot of the Spanish Steps and the Fountain of the Four Rivers in Piazza Navona.

In the eighteenth century, when architect Nicola Salvi, and his patron, Pope Clement XII, decided to construct the Trevi (on the site of an earlier fountain), they took antiquity as their model. Just as ancient Roman generals were welcomed back to Rome with elaborate triumphal processions and with the construction of triumphal arches, so the gushing arrival of the Aqua Virgo would be acclaimed.

Earlier Fountain on the Site of Rome's Trevi Fountain An earlier fountain (left) existed on the site of Rome’s Trevi Fountain

To give form to this idea, Salvi used a triumphal arch motif to frame the dramatic arrival of Oceanus, the divine personification of water. The god surfs his way through the arch on an oyster-shell chariot that is drawn by powerful winged seahorses and is driven by Tritons blowing on conch shells to herald his arrival.

As visitors to the fountain, we are the lucky spectators who witness this extraordinary aquatic drama. The waters of the Trevi fountain tumble across craggy rocks and we join centuries of viewers in expressing our wonder at the arrival of a god and his element in our presence. For those insistently rational spectators who remain unimpressed by the appearance of the immortal Oceanus, female figures standing in niches on either side of the triumphal arch remind us of the health and abundance brought by the Trevi’s clean and clear waters.

Trevi Fountain in Rome

On October 19th, 2007, vandals dyed the waters of the Trevi Fountain red. To read about their act (and to see a photo), click here.  Or click here to admire Susan Sanders’  Trevi Shoppers photograph.

19
Oct

Asterix & Obelix

Asterix

There are millions of children in the world who first encountered the ancient Romans through the eyes of Asterix & Obelix, the stars of an ultra-popular comic book series that made its first appearance in the world 1959. Set in antiquity, the comics detail the adventures of a Gaulish hero named Asterix and his friends, all of whom live in a village surrounded by invading Romans.  Fortunately,  Asterix & Obelisk are able to keep the Romans from invading their town by means of a magic potion that gives tremendous strength.

Since the comics first appeared in 1959, some 325 million copies of the 33 Asterix books have been sold, with translations into languages as diverse as Urdu, Arabic, and even Latin. That makes for a lot of children who have spent time cheering for the Gauls as they try to defend themselves against the nasty Roman forces.

Are you one of those people who can’t think of ancient Rome without thinking of Asterix & Obelisk? Then you’ll want to read this article about the comic duo and their creators on the BBC website.

18
Oct

Roma FilmFest 2007

2007 Roma Cinema Festival

via ANSA:

Sophia Loren, Cate Blanchett, Keira Knightley, Halle Berry, Monica Bellucci, Sharon Stone, Robert Redford, Tom Cruise and Sean Penn are among the stars who will light up this year’s second edition of the Rome Cinema Festival, organizers said Thursday.

Blanchett will be the first to hit the red carpet on October 19 in a reprise of her acclaimed 1998 Elizabeth I portrayal in visionary Indian director Shekhar Kapur’s Elizabeth: The Golden Age.

Loren will bring the curtain down on October 27 as she receives a career achievement award.

In between, an array of would-be blockbusters and more arty fare from 40 countries will bid to draw at least as many viewers as the half million spectators the inaugural edition attracted.

Rome’s film-buff mayor Walter Veltroni, who achieved his dream of bringing a major movie event to the Italian capital despite sneers from the cinema establishment and controversy over a clash with the Venice fest, said Thursday:

“This year is going to be even better”.

Shrugging off the nay-sayers who thought the fest might be postponed or even scratched, Veltroni added: “They’re always slamming novelty in this country. It’s one of the national vices”.

Cate Blanchett in Elizabeth Cate Blanchett in Elizabeth: The Golden Age

Redford’s Lions for Lambs, a US-Afghanistan political drama he directed and stars in alongside Cruise and Meryl Streep, is one of the most keenly awaited films.

It is one of two US offerings out of competition, along with 83-year-old Sidney Lumet’s Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead starring Philip Seymour Hoffman, Ethan Hawke and Albert Finney.

Film buffs are also dying to see Francis Ford Coppola’s first film in ten years, Youth Without Youth, which he described as a “highly personal philosophical noir” set in prewar Europe and based on a novella by Romanian writer Mircia Eliade.

Other treats for the auteur crowd are sure to be Martin Scorsese’s homage to Sergio Leone, Danish cult director Susanne Bier’s first English-language film, Things We Lost In The Fire, with the steamy pairing of Berry and Benicio Del Toro, and French veteran Alain Corneau’s Le Deuxieme Souffle with Daniel Auteuil and Bellucci.

Corneau’s film is one of 14 competing for the top Marcus Aurelius prize, including Hector Babenco’s El Pasado with Gael Garcia Bernal, Jason Reitman’s Juno with Ellen Page, Reservation Road by Hotel Rwanda director Terry George and starring Joaquin Phoenix and Jennifer Connelly, and Mongol, a tale of the youth of Genghis Khan by Russian director Sergei Bodrov of Prisoner of the Caucasus fame.

Sophia Loren
Sophia Loren in Ieri, Oggi e Domani

Also in contention are two Spanish films, Barcelona, Una Mapa and Caotica Ana; Fugitive Pieces from Canada; France’s Ce Que Mes Yeux Ont Vu; China’s Li Chun; and an Iranian-Japanese production, Hafez.

The two Italian contenders are Carlo Mazzacurati’s la Giusta Distanza and Emidio Greco’s L’Uomo Privato.

Among the fest’s special events are a focus on India with new films such as Anurag Kashyap’s No Smoking and a look at new socially and environmentally conscious movies from Hollywood such as Penn’s Into The Wild, Tim Robbins’ Noise and Gavin Hood’s Rendition with Reese Witherspoon, Streep and Jake Gyllenhaal.

Knightley, fresh from her acclaimed role in the Ian McEwan adaptation Atonement, appears in another literary adaptation, Silk, from the international bestseller by Italian novelist Alessandro Baricco.

Sharon Stone is not appearing on film but in the flesh, as the charity auctioneer at a top fashion house’s gala ball, modeled on a similar event at Cannes.

Cannes Director Gilles Jacob will be sending a personal message wishing the festival even more success, accompanied by his homage to Italian screen icon Anna Magnani, Lupa Romana.

18
Oct

Baroque Reloaded

Bernini's Ecstasy of Saint Teresa

If you think that the only place to see special effects is in The Matrix, then think again. The Eternal City, Rome, is filled with jaw-dropping stunts—bodies whirling through space at light speed, saints experiencing out-of-body rapture of the “red pill” kind, and architecture designed for another world. This is not just decoration, this is not just religious zeal, and it’s not just “old Europe’s old art”. This IS Roman Baroque and even today it provides a show-stopping, no-holds-barred spectacle that’s meant to convince viewers that they have traveled to an alternate reality! In order to be persuaded by the Roman Baroque experience, you have to shed your beliefs in efficiency, economy, and the remote control, but having done that, you’ll never be the same again.

Rome is the Zion of the Baroque. It all started here in the I7th century when such artists as Gianlorenzo Bernini, Francesco Borromini, and Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio envisioned a world that wasn’t limited by the bounds of time, space, or matter. Take Bernini’s ravishing St. Teresa in Ecstasy as an example (above). In the Cornaro Chapel of Santa Maria della Vittoria, Bernini, the master of all materials, shaped stone, wood, gold, and even light in such a way as to convince viewers that they were witnessing the moment of Saint Teresa’s ‘transverberation’ with God. It’s religious theater optimus maximus - a moment of sheer spectacle. The sainted Teresa, overcome with pleasure and pain as an angel of fire pierces her body and soul, floats weightless on a cloud and is filled with the divine love of God! As our mouths gape, unable to believe that marble floats and that Teresa has been in this position for centuries, we can’t help but notice that the saint, utterly rapturous, is as oblivious to her sculpted onlookers (perched in opera boxes within the chapel) as she is of the flash of our digital cameras.

Dome of Borromini's San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane

Outside the church, once again in the terra firma matrix and with composure regained, one can stroll down the Quirinal Hill and partake in an equally powerful transcendence at the church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (above). The small but exquisite church was designed by Bernini’s arch rival, Francesco Borromini. In contrast to Bernini, who left no surface unadorned in his efforts to generate a divine experience, Borromini’s primary tool in rendering the heavenly realm was light itself. The all-white stuccoed interior of his church is an exercise in restraint. Time evaporates here and thanks to Borromini’s expert manipulation of space and natural light, the church seems to glow and pulse, transporting us to another dimension. The metaphysical experience first sooths, then slowly stimulates both mind and body. Here the vastness of the universe is summarized and given human proportions, and one can hardly help but contemplate the supernatural.

Caravaggio's Calling of Saint Matthew

The supernatural becomes the hyper-real when one gazes upon the paintings of Baroque’s bad boy, Caravaggio. Known to have killed a man in a bar fight, this radical and rebellious painter single-handedly revolutionized the depiction of religious themes in the early 17C. Caravaggio’s extraordinary empathy and innate talent allowed him to create paintings that open doors to a world that’s more a parallel universe than a painted contrivance. The paintings invite us to step into highly staged scenes; they ask us to sympathize with their characters and to feel their pain; above all, Caravaggio’s paintings persuade us to believe that the events they depict are happening in our present-day world. In the Calling of Saint Matthew (above), painted for a chapel in San Luigi dei Francesi, we see a room that appears to be an extension of our own space. There’s a table surrounded by the rough and tumble characters modeled on Caravaggio’s notorious street punk friends. At the far right, Christ enters the room, raises his arm, and points to Matthew, calling him to become his disciple. The disbelief shown on Matthew’s face lets us know that he’s as awestruck at being chosen for a religious mission, as we are surprised at being let into this melodramatic moment.

How to “Go Baroque”
If these metaphysical tricks tempt you to visit Rome and to experience its Baroque wonders, then you’ll want to visit the sites featured in this article:

The Church of Santa Maria della Vittoria houses Bernini’s Saint Teresa in Ecstasy. The church is located at Via Venti Settembre, 17.

Borromini’s Church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane. Via del Quirinale, 23.

The Church of San Luigi dei Francesi houses Caravaggio’s Calling of Saint Matthew, as well as his Martyrdom of Saint Matthew, and The Inspiration of St. Matthew. You’ll find San Luigi at Piazza San Luigi dei Francesi, 5.

Spectators watching Bernini's Saint Teresa in Ecstasy

14
Oct

A Virtual Visit to the Sistine Chapel

Sistine Chapel in Second Life

As the most visited site in Rome, the Sistine Chapel hosts about 19,000 pushing and shoving visitors each day.  Many of these art enthusiasts stand in a seemingly endless line for hours, enduring hot sun or driving rain as they wait for their chance to see the stunning artworks in the Chapel.

If you’re one of those people who cna’t stand the thought of the crowds, but long to see Michelangelo’s masterpiece, Vassar College has the solution for you! They’ve created a virtual Sistine Chapel in Second Life, so now there’s no need to stand in line or to shove your way through the crowds. You can admire Michelangelo’s stunning frescoes from the comfort of your own computer monitor. Will the experience be the same? Probably not. But Vassar’s virtual recreation is certainly a great way to prepare yourself for a visit to the real thing (or for an exam if you should happen to be taking an art history course).

Built in the 15th century by Pope Sixtus IV (the chapel takes his name), the Sistine Chapel walls were decorated by such celebrated artists as Botticelli and Perugino in the 1480s, while Michelangelo painted the ceiling with scenes from the Book of Genesis between 1508-12, and depicted the Last Judgment on the altar wall in the 1530s. The goal of Vassar’s Second Life recreation, is to allow up-close and virtual study of the both the 15th- and the 16th-century paintings, and for this reason they are depicted in great detail.

Sistine Chapel in Second Life

What’s the experience of visiting the virtual Sistine Chapel like? Because you’re freed from the constraints of space, time, and museum guards - not to mention crowds - you can get very very close to the paintings, even flying to the top of a wall for an inspection of a fresco’s minute details or sitting on a cornice below Michealngelo’s vault to admire the inlaid marble floor.

And there’s some added features. In the sixteenth century, Pope Leo X commissioned Raphael to design a series of tapestries showing the lives of Saints Peter and Paul.  These were to hang on the lower part of the chapel’s walls. Today those tapestries are kept in the Pinacoteca or painting gallery of the Vatican Museums, but in the Second Life reconstruction they’ve been installed in the chapel, making it possible to study these exquisite woven artworks in the place for which they were created.

The Sistine Chapel recreation was built by Steve Taylor, of Vassar College (AV: Stan Frangible.) It was built as a proof of concept, to explore how virtual reality might be used to learn about art and architecture, by experiencing the scale, context and social environment of a real-life space.

Sistine Chapel in Second Life

12
Oct

Photo Friday: History Unwrapped

History Unwrapped: A Photo by Susan Sanders

Susan Sanders has recently been haunting Rome’s EUR district, where the Museum of Roman Civilization is chock-full of plaster casts of Roman artworks.

On this Photo Friday, Susan shares a view of the Trajanic corridor in the Museum, where the ultra-orderly display installed under Mussolini’s Fascist regime provides the rare opportunity to see the reliefs that spiral up the Column of Trajan at eye-level.

As always, we’re grateful to Susan for providing us with such beautiful photographs of the Eternal City. To see more photographs, visit Susan’s photo blog, Rome With A View.

12
Oct

Adopt an Olive Tree!

Nudo - Adopt an Olive Tree

Nudo, an olive grove in Italy’s Le Marche region, offers you the unique opportunity to adopt an olive tree for a year and thereby to enjoy the fruits of the Italian harvest while supporting small scale farming.

By means of the Nudo website, would-be adopters pay a virtual visit to each of the 7 olive groves on the estate, deciding which one suits their fancy, and then paying 65 pounds or approximately $130 to support the needs of a tree for a year.

We’ve become partial to the grove called Il Fico, where there are 61 olive trees of the Leccino varietal, and we’ve learned that this grove is the special pet of the proprieters:

As the flattest grove and the one nearest the farmhouse, this area gets loads of attention. At the top are rows of fruit trees, at the bottom is the dreaded gulch which has already taken two olive trees and, whenever there is heavy rain, hopes for more.

Just hearing about that evil-sounding gulch makes us want to save a tree! We’re also told that in the Il Fico grove the “trees are highly productive, with some fantastic looking polyconic vase structures. These let in more light for the olives, help get parasites under control and make the fruit easier to harvest.”

Perusing the 7 groves and deciding which one is for you is a fun process. And, once you’ve chosen and adopted a tree, Nudo sends you an adoption certificate and a booklet with information about your tree. You’re also invited to visit Nudo. The innovative proprietors encourage you to see your tree, to water it, and even to hug it during the year that you sponsor its growth and care.
Adopting a tree allows you to enjoy the fruits of the harvest. In the spring you’ll get a package containing 1.5 - 2 liters of organically produced extra virgin olive oil (the amount depends on the harvest). In the fall, you’ll receive more extra virgin oil, this time made by crushing fresh lemons along with the olives, and a selection of hand made olive oil soaps scented with mint and rosemary, lemon, and lavender.

(Though Nudo says that the olive oil you receive is from your tree, they actually combine the olives from your tree with those from about 50 of its neighbors in order to facilitiating pressing. Think of it as being about the society rather than the individual.)

Love the idea, but not quite ready to take on responsibility for a tree yet? You can shop the Nudo store where quality olive oils and olive oil soap are available and make great gifts.

Nudo - Adopt an Olive Tree