Archive for January, 2008



09
Jan

Ark Assembly Instructions

Ark Assembly Instructions

Italy has been the sources of some really clever advertising meant to promote global warming awareness. We’ve featured some of those in the past and now want to bring you another witty effort : the ark assembly instructions!

Copy reads: Global warming is bringing us closer to a catastrophe of biblical proportions. Let’s make sure history doesn’t repeat itself.

Advertised brand: Global warming Effects
Advert title: Ark Instructions
Advertising Agency: Unbranded Communication, Milan, Italy
Creative Director: Gianluca Ghezzi
Art Director: Manuela Valtolina
Copywriter: Elia Canteri
Illustrator: Manuela Valtolina

09
Jan

The Can-onization of Michelangelo

Paco Rosic's Sistine Chapel

It took Michelangelo four years to paint the Sistine Chapel ceiling (1508-1512), but in Waterloo, Iowa, graffiti artist Paco Rosic managed to repeat the feat in only four months - using spray paint to depict a 1/2 scale version of the celebrated frescoes on the ceiling of a building his family has converted into a restaurant.

Paco was born in Sarajevo, but his family fled the Bosnian War in 1991, settling first in Germany where the he became a graffiti artist as a teenager. Six years later, the Rosen family immigrated to the United States and Paco decided to take his tagging skills to a new level.

Having first seen the Sistine Chapel in a book when he was six years old, Paco had always been obsessed with the work of Michelangelo. Thus, he decided to make it his mission to replicate the Renaissance masterpiece in his own medium of spray paint.

In full support of his dream, Paco’s parents used their life’s savings to purchase an 1870s building that was once an antique store. But, the shop’s ceiling wasn’t curved like the vault in the Sistine Chapel, so the family hired workers to tear it down and create a plaster ceiling that, at its highest point, is gently arched 14 feet above the floor. Paco ended up with 2,511 square feet of blank space.

Before starting the project, Paco traveled to Rome to study Michelangelo’s work up-close and in person. He spent four days sketching in the Sistine Chapel before heading back to Iowa to commence work.

For various reasons, Paco’s reproduction is not exactly like Michelangelo’s ceiling. He’s replicated the frescoes at a smaller scale and the space constraint has forced him to leave out some of the intricate details, for example, the eyes and cheekbones of the figures are made with broad lines of paint instead of tiny, delicate brushstrokes. As well, the medium of spray paint means that figures are even more vibrantly colored than they are in Michelangelo’s original.
Exactly how much spray paint does it take to complete such a project? Paco estimates that he used 2000 cans of Krylon paint at a cost of about $9000.

Paco Rosen's Sistine Chapel

08
Jan

Holy Backup

USB Maria

Is there anyone who hasn’t sometimes wished for holy backup to protect their most precious data? It’s finally available in the form of the Maria USB!

She’s appeared in modern guise to secure and safely store what is most important and precious to us, offering heavenly support next to the computer; especially for those situations where prayer is the only solution.

USB Maria

Standing dignified on her socket, enshrined in Plexiglass, when work calls she frees herself of her surroundings. Connected with the computer she comes to life, her red LED heard starts to beat – in passive state slowly, quicker whilst connecting or saving data. On her halo is engraved the prayer – “Oh Maria, keep my data safe!”

The 512Mb Maria - which costs 69 euro - can be ordered here.

USB Maria

06
Jan

Roman Holidays: Season Finale

Creche Scene in Rome's Aurelian Walls

Today, the Feast of Epiphany, marks the end of the holiday season in Rome. Over the past weeks, we at the eCool compound have alternated between being naughty and nice, but through this long and celebratory season, we’ve done all we can to insure that things go well in the New Year. We’ve honored pagan gods and Christian ones; we’ve worn our red underwear and eaten our lentils; and we’ve admired traditional holiday decorations as well as those a bit more interesting and innovative.

Today, we offer you one final holiday scene. It’s not particularly beautiful (and perhaps it’s a bit confounding), but without a doubt it’s an innovative way of embellishing the city.

Look closely at the photo above and you’ll see that a creche or presepe has been installed in niches in the Aurelian Wall where it runs across the top of the Via Veneto. Built between 271-275 AD by the Emperor Aurelian, these massive walls once enclosed all seven hills of Rome and were intended to protect Rome from invading forces. The entire circuit of walls ran some 12.5 miles around the city - and a very large portion of those walls still stand, marking the limits of Rome’s historic center.

Why embellish these ancient walls with a Christian nativity scene? We’ve no idea. But we like it, like it, yes we do….

And, with this unusual scene, we close our Roman Holidays series (to see other entries, click on the Roman Holidays category in the menu to the left), for after the celebration of the Epiphany, creche scenes come down, holiday decorations are stripped away, and life in Rome resumes its normal pace.

We wish you well in the New Year and hope you’ll enhance 2008 by visiting this site often. We’ll be here, doing everything we can to keep you up to date on all things hip and happening in Rome.

06
Jan

Excavation of a Cryptoporticus on the Palatine Hill

Excavation of a Cryptoporticus on the Palatine Hill

This weekend, archaeologists in Rome have announced a new discovery amongst the complex jumble of ruins on the Palatine Hill. In the depths of this all-important hill, excavators say they they have found a cryptoporticus or underground passage that may have been the site at which the Roman Emperor Caligula was killed by the Praetorian Guard in January in 41 AD.

The Roman historian, Suetonius, recounts the murder:

On the ninth day before the Kalends of February, at about the seventh hour [Caligula] hesitated whether or not to get up for luncheon, since his stomach was still disordered from excess of food on the day before, but at length he came out at the persuasion of his friends. In the covered passage through which he had to pass, some boys of good birth, who had been summoned from Asia to appear on the stage, were rehearsing their parts, and he stopped to watch and encourage them….From this point there are two versions of the story: some say that as he was talking with the boys, Chaerea came up behind, and gave him a deep cut in the neck, having first cried, “Take that,” and that then the tribune Cornelius Sabinus, who was the other conspirator and faced Gaius, stabbed him in the breast [part of the ritual at the sacrifice was that the slayer raised his axe with the question “Shall I do it?” to which the priest replied “Take that”]. Others say that Sabinus, after getting rid of the crowd through centurions who were in the plot, asked for the watchword, as soldiers do; and that when Gaius gave him “Jupiter,” he cried “So be it,” [another formula at a sacrifice was “receive the fulfillment of your omen”, i.e., in naming Jupiter, the god of the thunderbolt and sudden death], and as Gaius looked around, he split his jawbone with a blow of his sword. As he lay upon the ground and with writhing limbs called out that he still lived, the others dispatched him with thirty wounds; for the general signal was ” Strike again.” Some even thrust their swords through his privates. At the beginning of the disturbance his bearers ran to his aid with their poles [with which they carried his litter], and presently the Germans of his body-guard, and they slew several of his assassins, as well as some inoffensive senators. (Quoted from the Ancient History Sourcebook)

This underground passageway - perhaps the scene of an imperial murder - connects the house of Rome’s first emperor, Augustus, with the Roman Forum. Currently, it lays some nine meters below the elaborate Gardens that the noble Farnese family created on the hilltop in the 16th century when they leveled the ruins of the House of Tiberius, thereby filling the tunnel with earth.

Excavation of the cryptoporticus began in September under the direction of archaeologist Maria Antonietta Tomei. She and her team have spent the past months removing tons of earth from the five-meter tall tunnel, as well as from lateral passageways.

Excavation of a Cryptoporticus on the Palatine Hill

In the process the excavation team has discovered a sizable fragment of a marble sculpture depicting a member of the imperial family as a Greek god (see above, left), as well as three marble wings, perhaps belonging to akroterial or rooftop sculptures that embellished the nearby Temple of Victory.

What can be learned from these excavations? Superintendent of Archaeology, Angelo Bottini suggests that the discovery demonstrates that the House of Augustus - parts of which will open to the public on 2 March 2008 - was much more extensive than has previously been suggested.

Excavation of a Cryptoporticus on the Palatine Hill

04
Jan

Photo Friday: Celebrity Season

Celebrity Season, a Photo by Susan Sanders in Rome

It’s the Jesus Season, but the photograph provided to us today by Susan Sanders shows us a part of Rome’s usual cityscape, rather than something unique to the holidays. Because it’s the center of the Catholic faith, Rome’s streets are flanked by storefronts that sell religious equipment of every kind.  Though one street in particular specializes in products of a religious nature (Via dei Cestari, near the Pantheon), it’s not unusual to find stores like the one shown above nestled up next to stores filled with cheese, bread, automotive parts, and underwear.

Here, a sculpture of Jesus is surrounded by Virgin Mary, impassioned saints, baptismal fonts, chalices, candlesticks, and icons.

For more photos by Susan, visit her Rome With A View photo blog.

04
Jan

Roman Holidays: A Sporting Way to Celebrate

Ad from La Gazzetta dello Sport

In celebration of the holidays, La Gazzetta dello Sport has released some fabulous ads that play on Italy’s tradition of creating elaborate presepe or nativity scenes.

Tradition meets the cutting edge of sport in each of these ads for they depict carefully crafted wisemen and shepherds who celebrate the birth of Jesus in the most sporting manners.

Above, the three wisemen pedal furiously towards Bethlehem, holding their gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh in their hands as they go. But, these aren’t just generic wisemen figures! The Gazzetta dello Sport website gives the figures fictional identities, calling them Danil di Gaspare, Andy Melchiorre, and Eddy Baldassare (plays on the supposed names of the three kings - Caspar, Melchior, and Balthasar) and claims they’re competing in the biking world’s most important event, the Giro di Palestine.

Below, the soccer-playing shepherd known as Rove Sciath is shown in the historic match between Real Bethlehem and Atletico Nazareth, as he scores the winning goal for Atletico Nazareth. His formative years as a young soccer player were spent in Jordan and at 15 years of age he was acquired by Atletico Nazareth for the price of an ox and an ass and by 18 was competing in the big leagues. Now, to celebrate his big victory, he’ll be performing a multiplication of loaves and fishes.

Ad by La Gazzetta dello Sport

04
Jan

Restore the Murals at Gioiosa Jonica

Murals at Gioiosa Jonica in Reggio Calabria

In March 12, 1977, in the town of Gioiosa Jonica in the southern Italian region of Reggio Calabria, a Communist mill owner named Rocco Gatto was murdered in an old-style mafia hit.  Born in 1926 as the oldest of 15 children, Gatto was killed for refusing to pay fees extorted by the ‘ndrangheta or local Calabrian mafia.

In 1978, Gatto’s death was memorialized by a group of local artists in Gioiosa Jonica when they painted murals on the facade of a theater in Piazza Vittorio Veneto.  Now, some 30 years later, those murals have faded and fallen into disrepair and are in desperate need of restoration.  The photos above show the state of degradation: the photo on the left shows the murals in 1977 and the photo on the right depicts their current state.

In the interest of preserving the memory of Rocco Gatto and the fight against the mafia, an organization called da Sud is raising funds to restore the murals.  You can sign a petition by visiting the da Sud website or you can contribute funds (in Italy) by sending a donation through the Italian post office (C/C Postale n. 73340903 intestato a “Comitato pro murales teatro Gioiosa”. Causale “Campagna restauro Murales) or making a wire transfer to the following account: Abi 7601 Cab 16300.

03
Jan

Roman Holidays: Behaving Well for Befana!

Carbone (Candy Coal) for Sale over the holidays in Rome

The holidays aren’t yet over in Rome! Now that most have recovered from the excesses of New Year’s Eve (and fireworks have almost ceased to go off at random hours throughout the city), we’re all waiting for the next big celebration on Epiphany, January 6th.

Epiphany, of course, is celebrated as the day that the Three Wise Men visited the Baby Jesus, bestowing upon him gifts such as frankincense, gold, and myrrh. Thus, Italians have traditionally given one another gifts on Epiphany rather than on Christmas Day (though that practice is changing).

Just as American children are taught that they must behave in order to insure a visit from Santa Claus on Christmas Day, Italian children have traditionally been told that they must comport themselves nicely in order that Befana, the grandmotherly house frau who failed to accompany the Wise Men to Bethlehem (click here to read her story), might distribute gifts at their house on the feast of Epiphany.

What does Befana bring to children who haven’t been good? She brings Carbone Dolce (sweet coal, see photo above), a type of black candy that looks ominous but is sugary and sweet like rock candy and delights children by leaving teeth and tongue a frightening shade of black. In the run-up to Epiphany, carbone dolce is widely available for purchase both in stores and at the Piazza Navona Christmas Fair, as pictured above.

There’s still a few days before Epiphany (or Befana, as the holiday is often called in Italy), so if you’re eager to point out the bad behavior of friends and family when the 6th of January comes around, it’s time to start buying the carbone dolce and we suggest the Coal Bubble Gum shown at the bottom of this post.  Its chic box reads “because you’ve been very bad.”

Or, if you want to bestow a little tender loving care with your gift of coal, you can always make your own:

Carbone Dolce

3 1/2 cups sugar
3/4 cup water
3/4 cup light corn syrup
1 tablespoon black gel-paste food coloring
5 teaspoons pure extract — peppermint, cinnamon, or anise
1 teaspoon baking soda
Line an 8-inch square baking pan with a piece of aluminum foil large enough to overhang the sides by about 2 inches. Set aside.

Bring sugar, 3/4 cup water, and corn syrup to a boil in a medium saucepan over medium high heat. Stir to dissolve sugar, and wash down sides of pan with a pastry brush dipped in water to prevent crystals from forming.

Once mixture comes to a boil and all the sugar has dissolved, clip a candy thermometer to pan, and raise heat to high. Continue cooking without stirring until mixture registers 300°. Remove from heat.

Carefully add food coloring, extract, and baking soda; stir slowly with a clean wooden spoon until thoroughly combined and mixture no longer bubbles, about 2 minutes. Pour into prepared pan, and let cool completely.

Lift foil to remove candy from pan, and transfer candy to a large plastic bag. Crush with a kitchen mallet into chunks.

Coal Gum

02
Jan

Roman Holidays: Divers in the Tiber

Diver in the Tiber

Yesterday at high noon, in freezing temperatures, three divers plunged into the Tiber River from a height of more than 50 feet.

The event is a New Year tradition dating back to 1946, when a stuntman named Mr. OK who was trying to find work in the film industry leapt into the water from Ponte Cavour. Since then it has caught on as an annual event.

“I hope you all have a wonderful New Year,” said one of the divers, addressing onlookers in Italian. He dedicated his plunge to world peace.”Lets stop all these wars. Everyone should come down to the river with me instead of killing each other - Come On!”

Italy’s Corriere della Sera said on its Web site that two of the men were aged 40 and the other 56. Two were Italian and the third born in Syria, the report said.

Diver in the Tiber




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