Archive for July, 2008

31
Jul

Cross Stitching the Sistine Chapel

Cross Stitch of the Sistine Chapel

Michelangleo painted the Sistine Chapel ceiling in four years, between 1508-1512.  It took Texan Joanna Lopianowski-Roberts a decade to replicate his feat in a 40 x 80 inch cross stitch made with 1,809 different color combinations and a total of about 628,296 stitches!

Lopianowski-Roberts’ amazing feat is documented in a self-published book (on lulu.com) that includes 45 full color individual patterns for each scene, just in case you want to get in on the action. Lopianowski-Roberts describes the patterns:

These patterns are not computer generated. They have been meticulously created one square at a time. This allowed me to to transform the curved Sistine Chapel Ceiling into a flat pattern. There are no special stitches in the pattern, not even backstitch (except the lettering on the signs). There are only 1/4, 3/4 and full cross-stitches. Also, all the different individual pieces have been designed to interlock with the scenes around them. Although you may find patterns of parts of the Sistine Chapel Ceiling elsewhere, as an aggregate you will not find a similar pattern anywhere.

If you’re clicking over to lulu.com to buy the patterns and simply can’t wait to whip out your needle to create your own cross-stitched ceiling, you won’t be alone.   Others who are trying to match the feat have formed a Yahoo group.

Cross Stitched Sistine Chapel

29
Jul

St. Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds

St. Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds

A few weeks ago we admired the artistic allusions in the work of Ozmo, a street artist who seems unable to leave the past behind. Today, we bring you another detail of the work he created for the Scala Mercalli exhibit at Rome’s auditorium.

In this passage from a much larger work, Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds becomes St. Lucy in the sky (of course, there are diamonds hovering in the atmosphere as well) and the saint (patroness of the blind) is represented by the very eyes that medieval accounts of her life claimed weer gouged prior to her martyrdom.

See more of Ozmo’s work: Smited by a Nike Swoosh.

27
Jul

A Walk Through Trastevere

Church of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere, Rome

Rome’s Trastevere neighborhood is the midst of a full-blown celebration of itself this week. The Festa dei Noantri kicked off last Saturday with the Madonna Fiumarola procession (tonight the Madonna will take a voyage down the Tiber River) and here at the eCool Compound we’ve decided to join party by offering readers an overview of the artistic and cultural highlights of the hood.

So, if you’re interested in spending some time in Rome’s Trastevere neighborhood or are just looking for a virtual Rome fix to keep you going until your next visit to the Eterna, here’s an itinerary that begins with a sweeping view of the city, then takes you to a Renaissance palace, a medieval church, and a masterpiece of Baroque sculpture. (For those of you plan to make this journey in real time, be aware that it’s best to do this in the morning, due to the schedules kept by the various museums and sites listed below.)

The Aqua Paola or Fontanone on Rome's Janiculum Hill
THE JANICULUM HILL
Begin your morning with a hike (or a cab ride) that takes you up the Janiculum Hill to Piazza Garibaldi, where a statue of Garibaldi and marks the general area in which Garibaldi fought French forces in 1849 in an effort to defend the Roman Republic.

From Piazza Garibaldi, you’ll want to take in the sweeping view of Rome (anyone up for a game of “Name that Dome”?) before continuing on.

Travel southward on the Passeggiata Ganicolo, take a left on via di Porta San Pancrazio, and continue downhill until you reach a huge fountain that is locally called the Fontanone but is properly named the Aqua Paola.

Rising high above the Trastevere neighborhood, the fountain was constructed in the 1612 by Pope Paul V Borghese when he restored the Acqua Traina, an ancient aqueduct built by the Roman Emperor Trajan in the early 2nd century AD. Note the four grey columns on the façade of the fountain: they came from the Old St. Peter’s Basilica—the one constructed by the Emperor Constantine in the 4th century AD and torn down by Pope Julius II in the first decade of the 16th century.

The piazza in front of the Fontantone also offers a spectacular vista of Rome.

San Pietro in Montorio & the Tempietto

SAN PIETRO IN MONTORIO & BRAMANTE’S TEMPIETTO
(note: the gates to the Tempietto do not open until 10:00am)

From the Fontanone, take Via Garibaldi downhill until you see a church rising on the left side of the street. This is the church of San Pietro in Montorio, built (probably) by Bacio Pontelli for King Ferdinand & Queen Isabella of Spain between 1481 and 1500. The church itself is dark, but as you stroll through its cool interior, be sure in admire Sebastiano del Piombo’s painting of the Flagellation of Christ in the first chapel on the right. Sebastiano often worked from designs and drawings by Michelangelo and this painting may be an example of the cooperation between the two artists. You’ll be seeing more paintings by Sebastiano in the Villa Farnesina as your walk continues.

Next door to San Pietro in Montorio (to the right of the façade), you’ll find a cloister that houses one of the jewels of Rome’s Renaissance. The Tempietto (the name means “little temple”) was built for the Spanish monarchs about 1500 by superstar architect Bramante. The temple-like building is really a miniature church that memorializes a site that medieval pilgrims believed to be the place on which Saint Peter was crucified.

The design of the building marks Rome’s first real foray into the Renaissance. The architect Bramante demonstrates his knowledge of ancient architecture by creating a building that uses the Doric Order almost in the manner of ancient architects. It’s certain that he studied ancient round temples in order to better understand the rules and proportions by which ancient buildings were composed.

The Villa Farnesina in Rome

THE VILLA FARNESINA
(note: the Villa Farnesina is open from 9am-1pm, Mondays-Saturdays; closed on Sundays)

Leaving the cloister that contains the Tempietto, look to the left and you’ll see a set of steps leading downward. Follow the steps downhill and you’ll find that they end on Via Garibaldi. Turn left, following Via Garibaldi downhill until it intersects with Via di Porta Settimiana. Turn left on Via di Porta Settimiana, walk through the late 15th century Porta Settimiana (an archway spanning the road) and continue down the street (now called the Via della Lungara) until you reach number 230 where the Villa Farnesina is located.

You’ll have to pay a modest admission fee to enter the Villa Farnesina, but it’s a small price for the treasures that you’ll find inside. Constructed between 1506-1510, the villa was a luxurious getaway for Renaissance mogul Agostino Chigi, who banker to Popes and a marketer of a valuable mineral called alum.

Chigi asked the architect Baldessare Peruzzi to design this villa for his mistress (you might think of it as a “love shack”) and called in the best artists in town to paint the interior. Works by Raphael, Sebastiano del Piombo, Peruzzi, and Sodoma adorn the rooms, both upstairs and downstairs. Their paintings depict the great mythological love stories of classical antiquity and particularly notable is the entrance loggia (designed by Raphael and painted by his students) depicting the story of Cupid and Psyche. For a recap of that story, click here.

Click here to read about best-selling novelist Dave King’s work-in-progress, which features the Villa Farnesina.

THE GALLERIA NAZIONALE D’ARTE ANTICA IN THE PALAZZO CORSINI
If you’re a real lover of painting, there’s a treat in store when you leave the Villa Farnesina. Just cross the Via della Lungara and pay a visit to the National Gallery of Ancient Art in the Palazzo Corsini.

The building itself is an 18th century building and you’ll have to climb to the first floor to enter the museum. Inside are a variety of Renaissance and Baroque artworks by such artists as Fra Bartolomeo, Fra Angelico, Peter Paul Rubens, and Antony Van Dyck. One of the stars of the collection is Caravaggio’s Saint John the Baptist. There’s also a room in the gallery in which Queen Christina of Sweden is said to have died in 1689, so if you’re a particular fan of hers (or of the movie in which Greta Garbo played her) you may want to pay homage here.

Interior of the Church of Santa Maria in Trastevere

THE CHURCH OF SANTA MARIA IN TRASTEVERE
Leave the Farnesina or the Palazzo Corsini by retracing your steps down Via della Lungara. Once you’ve passed back through the Porta Settimiana, continue straight onto Via della Scala. Follow this street to Piazza Sant’Egidio and turn left when the piazza dead ends into Via della Lungaretta. Follow Via della Lungaretta for a few short blocks and you’ll emerge into Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere.

The focal point of the piazza is the medieval Church of Santa Maria in Trastevere and it’s absolutely gorgeous. The church is said to rise on the site of a miracle that occurred on the day that Christ was born, when a font of oil sprang from the ground. If that is the case, the church may well be the oldest in Rome.

What is certain is that the church was built (or rebuilt) in the mid-4th century and then restored in the 8th century and again in the 11th century. The building today is more or less a product of the 11th century when the gorgeous golden mosaics on the façade were installed. Be sure to take a stroll inside to see more stunning medieval mosaics in the apse. Some of the mosaics are attributed to the Roman artist Pietro Cavallini (you’ll be seeing more of his work in the Church of Santa Cecilia—see below).

Click here to read about a Christmas ritual that takes place in the church of Santa Maria in Trastevere.

The piazza around the church is the very center of the neighborhood. You may want to take a rest in one of the bars and watch the people go by. (After dark the Piazza becomes a college student hang-out and is not so much fun for grownups.)

San Crisogono Floor
THE CHURCH OF SAN CRISOGONO
Leave the Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere on the Via della Lungaretta (near the newsstand) and continue down this road until it intersects with Viale Trastevere. At that intersection, to your right, you’ll see the 12th century church of San Crisogono with its 17th century façade.

If the church is open, take a look inside. You’ll find it’s the typical medieval church (with a lovely marble floor) that’s been fancied up with baroque decorations installed by the Borghese family in the early 17th century.

If you’re interested in underground Rome, go to sacristy at the end of the left aisle of the church, give the sacristan a small monetary offering, and ask if you can go down into the excavations or scavi below the church. You’ll find the remains of an earlier 4th century church below as well as some of its medieval frescoes which date between the 8th and 11th centuries.

Cavallini Frescoes in Santa Cecilia

THE CHURCH OF SANTA CECILIA (see top photo)
Leaving the church of Santa Cecilia, go back to the Via della Lungaretta, cross Viale Trastevere, and continue down the road for a block until you’re standing in Piazza del Drago. Turn right, passing a (not-so-good) pizzeria called Ponentino, and then turn left on the small and windy Via dei Salumi. Follow Via dei Salumi for some blocks until it dead ends into Via dei Vascellari. Turn right on Via dei Vascellari which, after a block, will become Via di Santa Cecilia. Keep walking until a large Piazza opens up in front of you and you see the church of Santa Cecilia on the right.

You’ll want to admire the beautiful garden in front of the church before entering the 9th century church. Under the altar you’ll find a 17th century sculpture of Santa Cecilia by Stefano Maderno depicting the way the saint’s body looked when her tomb was discovered in the catacombs and opened in 1599.

At the back of the left aisle of the church, you can buy a ticket that will allow you to visit the excavations or scavi beneath the church. There you’ll find the ruins of ancient buildings, part of which are said to be the hot room of the baths in which the Romans tried to suffocate Santa Cecilia as a punishment for her Christian beliefs (they didn’t succeed and eventually beheaded her instead—note the wound on her neck in Maderno’s sculpture of her under the altar of the church).

As you leave the church, turn and look at the façade again. You’ll notice a door on the left side. Ring the bell and the nuns that care for the church will sell you a ticket and accompany you upstairs in an elevator where you’ll have the opportunity to admire the remains of some stunning 13th century frescoes that were rediscovered in 1900.

The frescoes, which depict the Last Judgment in gorgeous jewel tones, were executed by the Roman painter, Pietro Cavallini (whom art historians now see as a competitor to Giotto for the title “Father of the Renaissance”). Click here to read more about this debate.

Bernini's Blessed Ludovica Albertoni in Rome

THE CHURCH OF SAN FRANCESCO A RIPA AND BERNINI’S SCULPTURE OF BLESSED LUDOVICA ALBERTONI
Leaving the Church of Santa Cecilia, retrace your steps on Via di Santa Cecilia until it intersects with Via Genovese. Turn left on Via Genovese and follow it until the intersection with Via della Luce. Turn left on Via della Luce and follow the street until it enters Piazza San Francesco a Ripa where you’ll see the Church of San Francesco a Ripa.

Reconstructed in the 17th century, the church was founded in the 13th century next door to the hospice where Saint Francis stayed while visiting Rome in 1229.

Inside the church, be sure to have a look at the sculpture of Blessed Ludovica Albertoni in the last chapel on the left aisle. The holy woman spent her life caring for the poor and was prone to the kind of religious ecstasies depicted in this artwork. Done by an elderly Bernini in 1674 (he was 71 when he began the sculpture), the work bears a resemblance to his earlier and more famous Saint Teresa in Ecstasy in the church of Santa Maria della Vittoria.

25
Jul

Photo Friday: More Madonna

La Madonna Fiumarola Procession in Trastevere, Rome

As you may have learned from reading posts earlier this week, it’s Festa dei Noantri here in Trastevere, a week in which the Trasteverini celebrate the many ways in which they are unique in all of Rome.

Anyone who has spent some serious time in Trastevere could probably list 100 things that make this neighborhood a bit different (or maybe wackier) than other Roman hoods, but the one that’s being advertised this week is the special blessing of La Madonna Fiumarola.

Gianni Alemanno, Mayor of Rome, at the Madonna Fiumarola Procession

If you’re thinking that the blessing of some Madonna or another is no big deal in a city as jam-packed with Virgins as is Rome, it’s time to think again. The photos of the procession taken by Susan Sanders, clearly demonstrate the respect and solemnity granted to the occasion.

Nonne (or grandmothers) assume key viewing positions well in advance of the procession, cooling themselves with folding fans as they body check anyone who might dare to intrude upon their territory. Rome’s mounted police lead the procession, clearing the streets of unsuspecting tourists and evening grocery shoppers, while the military band serenades onlookers and provides a snappy beat for the Virgin’s promenade.  This year, the mayor even showed up (see above, he’s the one wearing the tricolor sash).

The procession of La Madonna Fiumarola in Trastevere, Rome

Of course, it’s the young men of Trastevere who really shoulder the burden of the event, carrying the Madonna through the streets.  The statue, in combination with the litter on which it is carried, weighs hundreds of pounds, making their task an extraordinarily strenuous one.

At the ring of a bell, the white-clad porters hoist the Madonna to their shoulders, but they can only walk about 20-30 yards before having to return her to terra firma.  The next lift is taken on by a team that’s had a bit of a breather.  It’s hard work, but it insures the safety and the prosperity of the neighborhood for the course of the coming year.

Procession of La Madonna Fiumarola

For more photos of this event, as well as others by Susan Sanders, visit her Rome With A View photo blog.

For more on the 2008 procession, click here and here.

For the 2007 procession and a more detailed explanation of the history of the Madonna Fiumarola, click here.  And for the 2007 event finale, in which the Virgin took a trip down the Tiber River, click here.

23
Jul

An Epic Building Project at Sperlonga

The Villa of Tiberius at Sperlonga

Dispatch from Sperlonga: Early 1st Century AD

The trials and tribulations of ruling a vast Empire are fraying the delicate nerves of our luxury-loving emperor, Tiberius. In a desperate attempt to find (yet another) place to get away from it all, our esteemed ruler is in the process of constructing a swanky seaside villa on a particularly idyllic stretch of the Tyrrhenian coast, some 70 miles south of Rome, where rocky cliffs riddled with caves or speluncae overlooking broad sandy beaches and a crystal clear sea once sailed by Odysseus.

Though the area is a well-established Roman resort, royalty watchers are shocked that the Emperor should choose to further expand his portfolio of luxury real estate with a villa in this locale, for his strained architects are already working around the clock to construct the twelve villas he’s scattering across the toney island of Capri. Countering arguments that the Emperor chose the location because of the quality of the local eels, an anonymous source close to the ruler reports that the site was chosen both for its natural beauty and for its proximity to important sites that affirm the heroic origins of Tiberius and his Julio-Claudian ancestors.

The Coast at Sperlonga

Always eager to keep our readers apprised of the latest in imperial architecture, the eCool blog is happy to report that we’ve been given exclusive access to plans for the royal retreat. Our preliminary study of those plans – as well as interviews with unnamed sources close to the Emperor – suggest that the new villa will provide the frazzled sovereign with state-of-the-art luxuries like hypocaust-heated rooms, inlaid marble or opus sectile floors, and a twelve-chariot garage.

Well-positioned to take in spectacular seaside views, the villa complex will also include a dining room unlike any other known in the Roman world. At this very moment, an unusually large cave at the water’s edge is being retro-fitted with fish-breeding pools and stylish banqueting couches. Decoration of the dining cave will follow a mythological theme, with artworks created by the most esteemed sculptors of our era.

Rumor has it that the centerpiece of the triclinium will be a colossal sculpture carved by the Rhodian wonderboys, Athanadoros, Polydorus, & Hagesandros of Rhodes (the super-sculptors that earned so much acclaim for their representation of the Laocoon, now on display in Rome). We are told that the artists have been asked to render an over-life-size image of the blinding of the Cyclops Polyphemus, a story known to us all from our childhood study of Homer’s Odyssey.

Blinding of the Cyclops, a Sculpture at Sperlonga

Though the artists will not confirm the report, they do suggest that such a theme would be in keeping with their long-standing interest in depicting dramatic and even shocking subjects. They also hint that if asked to undertake this task, they would likely depict the very moment that the hulking Cyclops, collapsed in a drunken stupor, has his eye gouged out by Odysseus and his men. “It would be such a challenge to represent a one-eyed creature without making him look utterly repulsive,” said Athanadoros during our recent interview. “Yes, and I’d love an opportunity to carve Odysseus in such a way as to convey his courage, tenacity, and cleverness,” added Polydorus while Hagesandros nodded and winked slyly.

Rumor also suggests that Cyclops will not be alone in the cave, but that he will be part of a larger decorative ensemble that includes another colossal sculpture, this time of valiant Odysseus and his brave men battling Scylla. Life-size representations of Odysseus with the body of Achilles and Odysseus and of Diomedes with the Paladium, the sacred image of Athena stolen from the city of Troy are also planned.

Why the relentless Homeric rehash? While the great Augustus, stepfather of Tiberius, bored us to tears with endless references to his magical, mystical ancestors, Aeneas and Romulus, our current monarch focuses on another line of his family tree. Those readers who were attentive in their high school Roman Civics courses will recall that Tiberius, as well as the other members of the Claudii family, claim descent from Telegonus, a son born to Odysseus during his fling with the sorceress Circe.

The Cave / Triclinium at Sperlonga

Which, dear readers, explains everything. Imagine that you have been invited to feast with Tiberius in his glorious dining cave. Torches line the walls. As the flames flicker, the Odyssean sculptures that surround your dining couch seem almost to come to life Before your very eyes, the wily and daring Odysseus performs the superhuman feats that generations have celebrated. Is it the light? Is it the wine? Or have you entered the realm of gods and heroes?

Outside the cave, the waves lap the sandy shore, making a rhythmic noise that reminds you that in his long bout with post-Trojanic stress, Odysseus’s ship ploughed that very sea, stopping just a few miles away on Monte Circeo where the hero took up residence with Circe, an enchantress whose pharmaceutical powers caused Odysseus to forget his home and family temporarily and to live happily as her consort. From their union sprang a family so powerful as to now lead the Roman Empire.

Will it end here? Will the villa at Sperlonga (along with the 12 on Capri) satiate our Emperor’s desire for luxury settings? Or will Tiberius be lured away by the song of the sirens?

The Museum at Sperlonga

22
Jul

The Making of the Via dei Fori Imperiali

Photos from an Exhibition on the Making of Rome's Via dei Fori Imperiali

As many readers will know, Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini carved an imperial procession route through the heart of the ancient Roman city center, laying a wide road, now called the Via dei Fori Imperiali, that stretches from the Colosseum to Piazza Venezia.

In creating the road that he called Via dell’Impero or Street of the Empire (the name was changed in 1945), Mussolini and his archaeologist, Corrado Ricci, destroyed a great number of renaissance and medieval buildings and quickly plowed through any number of ancient archaeological deposits as well as important ancient buildings and their surroundings.

Starting tomorrow, 23 July, the Capitoline Museums will be hosting an exhibition  documenting the vast process of demolition and excavation by which the road was created and Mussolini’s excavation of parts of the Forum of Augustus, the Forum of Caesar, the Forum of Nerva, and the Forum and Markets of Trajan.

140 works — among them photos, paintings, frescoes, and ancient sculptures — will be on exhibit.

The exhibition is titled “L’invenzione dei Fori Imperali. Demolizioni e scavi: 1924-1940,” and it will remain on view until 23 November.

Photos from an Exhibition on the Making of Rome's Via dei Fori Imperiali

21
Jul

Madonna & Her Fan Club

Madonna & Her Biggest Fan

Yesterday we showed you images of the annual Festa de Noantri and the procession of the Madonna Fiumarola. Today we bring you one more image, showing the Madonna and one of her biggest fans.

We haven’t identified the guy in the Peace flag, but we see him around. A few years ago he staged a protest (same outfit) on the Campidoglio, stepping inside the chain and ballards that surround the faux image of Marcus Aurelius in the piazza. Members of the eCool team happened to be there for the event, and though his cause never became entirely clear during the encounter he provoked with the police, we can only guess that his rainbow peace cape provides a clue as to his thinking.

Needless to say, we were thrilled to see him bringing the peace cause to Trastevere’s most important religious event.

For more images from the Madonna Fiumarola procession, visit Susan Sander’s Rome With A View photo blog.

20
Jul

Festa de Noantri Begins

Madonna della Fiumarola

Each year in late July, Rome’s Trastevere neighborhood braves the heat to stage the Festa de Noantri, a celebration of the uniqueness of the neighborhood and its inhabitants and a festival in honor of their patroness, the Madonna Fiumarola.  Streets are closed.  Stalls selling porchetta, crepes, and other delicacies are erected.  Piazzas host evening concerts.  Andthe famous Madonna makes a giro around the hood.

La Madonna Fiumarola in Trastevere, Rome

In a long entry last year, we told you all about the statue of the Madonna Fiumarola, recounting the way in which she was fished out of the Tiber River and given shelter in a Trastevere church in 1535.  Since that time, each year during the Festa de Noantri, the Madonna has made a tour around the Trastevere neighborhood — it’s her way of bestowing blessings while checking on the general state of affairs

The Procession of La Madonna Fiumarola, Trastevere, Rome

Last night was the Virgin’s big night.  Dressed in a new cream-colored gown and wearing a lovely coral necklace, she was placed on a giant wooden litter and carried through the streets of Trastevere.  Local priests, in the company of the Cardinal Józef Glemp, led the procession, chanting prayers over a loudspeaker as the Virgin made her way through Trastevere’s narrow and cobblestoned streets.  The police band announced her arrival in each street while hundreds of devotees thronged behind the Madonna asking for her blessings and cheering her with shouts of “Viva Maria!”

La Madonna Fiumarola in Trastevere

20
Jul

Badda Boom, Bada Bing, Renaissance Style

Tony Soprano as the Duke of Montefeltro

This weekend Reuters is reporting the sale of a “Sopranos” inspired painting that depicts James Gandolfini, aka Tony Soprano, as the ultimate Renaissance prince, Federico da Montefeltro, the Duke of Urbino.  Naturally, Edie Falco, who plays Tony Soprano’s wife, Carmela, assumes the position of the esteemed Duchess.

Painted by Sopranos supporting actor Federico Castelluccio, who played the Italian hit man Furio Giunta who fell in love with Carmela (and, as it turns out is an artist in his off-the-screen life), the painting is said to have been sold  to Toronto oil executive Robert Salna for $175,000, the highest price paid for memorabilia from the hit TV series.

From a Reuters story by Daniel Trotta.  Click here for the whole article.

18
Jul

Eternally Cool Meets Facebook!

Eternally Cool on Facebook

Hey all you Facebookers!  Eternally Cool now has a Facebook page and we want you to click on over and become part of the eCool community!

Show us your love by clicking here and becoming an eCool fan!  It’s another way to keep up with all that’s hip & happening in Rome.