Archive Page 2

13
Jun

Photo Friday: Something Old, Something New

Bride at the Fountain.  A Photo of Rome by Susan Sanders.

It’s June and brides are everywhere in the city of Eternal Love!

In fact, in recent days, the international press has been exclaiming over photos of Tom Hanks helping a bride get to her wedding. It seems that her path was blocked by the crew filming Angels & Demons here in Rome, so Tom stepped in to escort the bride through the mayhem. Click here if you must. We can’t be bothered.

We’re more interested in those Roman brides who have already made it to the church on time and are now on to bigger and better things—namely the taking of wedding photographs. On a warm summer day in the Eterna, it’s common to see wedding parties posing in front of ancient monuments, a ritual suggesting that the “for better or worse” deal isn’t valid unless Roma herself is a witness.

Last week, Susan Sanders caught just such a wedding party taking a break on the slopes of the Capitoline. The bride bends to sip from a fountain spouting water brought to Rome by the ancient Aqua Marcia, while her eternal love chivalrously holds her bouquet.

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

12
Jun

U.S. Citizens for Peace & Justice

War Criminals in Rome

Yesterday, U.S. President George W. Bush arrived in Rome for a three-day stay. The security and complications surrounding his visit will effectively shut down parts of the Eterna and will leave Romans sitting in huge traffic jams or trekking long distances through the city on foot.

As demonstrated by the photo above, the President’s arrival was greeted with the usual good will and fanfare. U.S. Citizens for Peace & Justice, an organization with a noble mission, joined with Italian activists and international friends, to denounce the countless crimes of the Bush regime, from the destruction of the countries of Iraq and Afghanistan, to torture and illegal detention, to intelligence fixing and threats of attacks against Iran.

They made a symbolic citizen’s arrest of Bush, Cheney and Rice (see above), leading them from Piazza della Repubblica to Piazza Barberini in chains.

Visit the U.S. Citizens for Peace and Justice website to find out more about the organization or to join its efforts.

10
Jun

do-it-yourself Football Fans

DIY Football Fans by Samsung

If you’re reading this blog, there’s a good chance you’re supporting Italy in the Euro 2008 football championships–despite their brutal defeat by the Dutch last night. Maybe you’ve even dashed off to your local Standa to acquire Azzuri t-shirts and a variety of red, white, and green wigs (they come in both the curly- and straight-haired models).

Despite such full-blown enthusiasm, you may be finding that it’s just not as fun cheering for the Italians from your living room. You may be missing the experience of sitting jam-packed without thousands of other rabid football fans in the stadium at the Foro Italico. We certainly are!

If that’s the case, you’ll want to get busy creating Samsung’s DIY Office Toy Supporters. Download their four enthusiastic football fans, cut them out, and assemble them, and you’ll have a crowd of your own! Rino, Lillo, Igor, and Lina are currently on offer, but there’s more to come!

DIY Footbal Fans by Samsun

08
Jun

Stuck On You

Tape Sculpture in Rome's Pigneto District

Residents of Rome’s Pigneto district (which the daily newspaper La Repubblica calls a “cultural Capitoline”) are currently enjoying an influx of new inhabitants. A number of colorless figures in Degas-esque dancer poses have appeared on light poles, in trees, and on billboards and bridges.

Attributed to an artist named Tommaso, the figures are made of adhesive tape and are molded on real live humans (those of you dying to try this at home should click over to tapesculpture.org for instructions regarding the creation of such figures and/or sign up for a tape casting workshop–details on the tapesculpture.org site).

Tape Sculpture in Rome's Pigneto District

What inspired Tommaso to decorate Pigneto with these translucent figures? It seems to be an outgrowth of Mark Jenkins’ Storker Project in which tape babies were placed in cities across the world.

Jenkins, an American artist most widely known for the street installations he creates using packing tape, described the Storker Project in this way:

The Storker Project is a species propagation movement by STORKER seeking to incite select individuals from the public at large, perhaps you. If while passing by one you feel strange sensations in your nipples or fingertips, adopt the infant, breast feed, and give it plenty of TLC. It will gradually mature to a full size Tape Man or Woman to co-habitate with you and eventually take you to the Glazed Paradise (or possibly oust you from your home).

Looks like some of those tape babies have grown up and moved to Rome!

Tape Sculptures in Rome's Pigneto District

08
Jun

A Challenge to Italian Pizza Supremacy

Longest Line of Pizza in the World

In recent days, the European Union has declared that Pizza Napolitana (known as “Margherita”) is now recognized as a “regional specialty”, rather akin to French Champagne and German beer. The EU’s declaration on Neapolitan pizza means that anyone who hopes to sell it in Europe under the official title, Pizza Napolitana, should theoretically be subject to strict inspections.

The rules, published in the European Union’s Official Journal, were drawn up by the Associazione Vera Pizza Napoletana (the True Neapolitan Pizza Association) state the following:

  • The pizza must be no more than 35cm (14in) in diameter and must be no thicker than a third of a centimeter at its center, while rising to 2cm at the crust.
  • Tomatoes used on Pizza Napoletana must be the San Marzano variety grown in the fertile soil at Mount Vesuvius’ base, the oil must be extra virgin, and the cheese should be nothing but buffalo mozzarella. Furthermore, all the ingredients must be from the Campania region.
  • The oven must be wood-fired, and the pizza must cook in less than two minutes.

These rigorous specifications did not dissuade the Australians from attempting to break a recently-set world record for the longest line of pizza (EU officials can rest easily as we don’t think they made true Pizza Napoletana).

Yesterday, as thousands of spectators looked on, 25 chefs in the Italian neighborhood of Leichhardt, in Sydney’s inner west, used 500kg of flour, 250 liters of tomato sauce and 350kg of mozzarella cheese to create 826 freshly cooked pizzas that stretched 221 meters when lined up. In doing so, they broke the previous pizza line record of 220 meters that was set just three weeks ago in Fort Rustico, Florida.

After the Guinness World Record adjudicator deemed the record broken, the pizzas where donated to the food rescue organisation, OzHarvest, to feed Sydney’s homeless and disadvantaged.

Italian cruise ship company Costa Cruises sponsored the event, donating $10 for every metre of pizza to children’s charity Variety. Including donations, more than $5000 was raised.

Creating the Longest Line of Pizzas in the World

06
Jun

Photo Friday: The Hellenistic Prince

The Hellenistic Prince in Rome's Palazzo Massimo

Today, on Photo Friday, Susan Sanders gives us some beautiful photos of the second century BC Hellenistic Prince, an over life size bronze sculpture found on the ground floor of the Museo Nazionale Romano at the Palazzo Massimo alle Terme.

Since its discovery in 1885, on the slopes of the Quirinal Hill where it (perhaps) stood in the Baths of Constantine, the sculpture has been variously identified as Philip V of Macedon, Perseus, Alexander Balas, and more vaguely, a hero, a general, and Agrippa.  Despite all these attributions, scholars have not settled on an identification but instead of concentrated on understanding what this sculpture–with its rippling muscles and well-defined contours–might have meant to those who gazed upon it in Rome in the second century BC.

The Hellenistic Prince in Rome's Palazzo Massimo

German scholar Paul Zanker reminds us that this beautiful bronze would have seemed shockingly Greek (and shockingly naked) to Romans when it went on display shortly afer its creation in the second half of the second century BC.  In his book, The Power of Images in the Age of Augustus, Zanker says:

When the splendid bronze statue honoring a great general was displayed in Rome, some time before the middle of the second century BC, the total nudity of the figure must have been extremely disturbing to most Romans.

Why the shock and awe?  Romans of the second century BC  were not portrayed nude in art.  It simply wasn’t done.  Rather, a Roman honored with a public likeness would most often be depicted wearing a toga, the symbol of his status and achievement in Rome’s competitive political world.  In fact, to the average Roman in the second century BC, nudity was a Greek perversion and the habits of such decadent foreigners were to be avoided.

So who then is this Greek-icizing bronze figure and what does he want us  to know about him when we gaze upon his abundance of bare skin?  Zanker maintains that the absence of a crown clearly demonstrates that he’s a Roman who forged across cultural boundaries before the rest of his peers.

His choice of pose is meant to remind us of the most famous of all Greeks.  With his weight thrown heavily onto one leg and his torso and arms spiraling around the staff on which he leans, the figure is reminiscent of a famous portrait of Alexander the Great made by the all-star sculptor, Lysippus in the 4th century BC.

Thus, Zanker concludes that this is a portrait of a Roman who wants us to admire him for the reasons that Alexander was admired: we are to gaze upon his god-like physique and to understand that he is a man of military prowess and superhuman achievement akin to that of his hero, Alexander.

The Hellenistic Prince in Rome's Palazzo Massimo

06
Jun

Every Breath You Take

Environmental Protest in Rome

Around 150 statues across Rome were wearing anti-pollution masks over their mouths on Thursday morning following a covert night-time operation by environmental activists.

Early-morning joggers and dog walkers alerted the police to the masks after finding them on statues of Roman emperors lining Via dei Fori Imperiali near the Colosseum,
famous magistrates around Rome’s Palace of Justice, and Garibaldi’s mustachioed generals on the Janiculum Hill.  Statues in Piazza del Popolo and along two bridges across the River Tiber were also dressed in the protective gear.

Rome's Statues Participate in Environmental Protest

The activists from environmental group Terra! had also hung no-entry road signs around the necks of the statues bearing the chemical symbol for carbon dioxide.
”It’s incredible that they could have done this without anyone realising,” said a dog walker who notified police to masks and signs placed over the white marble angels on the bridge leading to Castel Sant’Angelo.  ”These angels are at least four meters high: even if it was during the night, you’d still need a ladder to reach their heads”.

Terra! said the masked statues were ”protesting together with activists” about carbon dioxide emissions from cars and appealed to the European Commission to issue new
regulations for the reduction of the greenhouse gas.  Restoration experts have long been concerned about the effects of air-borne pollutants on the city’s statues and monuments.
Nitrates, heavy metals and sulphur dioxide - and not CO2 - are the main culprits for eroding and discolouring the marble and bronze masterpieces.

Via ANSA

Rome's Statues Particpate in an Environmental Protest

05
Jun

Apollo & Daphne: Looking for Love in All the Wrong Places

Bernini's Apollo & Daphne in Rome's Galleria Borghese

When we at the eCool Compound are not dedicating our time to work, food, or sleep, we’re often talking about ancient myths. We love to hear the stories of the gods and goddesses told–and we also love to recount them to enthusiastic audiences. And so, in order to indulge our mythological mania, we’re starting a new series of posts dubbed “Myth Remastered.” It is our hope that this series will give us a good excuse to recount our own slightly remixed versions of the titillating tales and will also remind readers of the masterworks of Roman art and architecture that embody the stories.

We inaugurate the series today with a retelling of the story behind Gianlorenzo Bernini’s famous sculpture of Apollo & Daphne in Rome’s Galleria Borghese:

Bernini's Apollo & Daphne in Rome's Galleria Borghese

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 victim utterly unable to control their emotions.

Pierced by the immortal marksman’s golden-tipped arrows, one would fall 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 dull darts were destined to chase wildly after the very person who would be utterly repulsed by their affections.

Ovid, a Roman poet of the first century BC, informs us that Cupid even went so far as to shoot his arrows at other gods. The poet gleefully tells of an event that occurred one afternoon, as Cupid was hanging out on Mount Parnassus with Apollo, the god of arts and the overseer of hunting and healing. As the deities go, Apollo was an all-around good guy, well liked by his fellow immortals, and on this particular day, he and Cupid were teasing each other in the way that boy gods so often do. Being the elder of the two, Apollo was inflicting insults on Cupid, mocking the small size and puny power of the younger god’s arrows, while boasting that his own projectiles were necessarily longer and more potent, because he used them to hunt and kill wild animals.

Audibly sighing and rolling his eyes, Cupid refused to return the insults, and so Apollo became bored of the verbal sparring and headed out for a real hunt. But, as Apollo turned from Cupid, the little love-god’s parting remark left the older (but perhaps not wiser) deity worrying about what might befall him:

Your bow, Apollo,
May conquer all, but mine shall conquer you.
As every creature yields to power divine
So likewise shall your glory yield to mine.

These lines are commonly translated as:

Dude.
You may be bigger than me,
but I’ve got ways of getting even.

The vengeful Cupid began to look for the right opportunity to get back at Apollo. Soon he spied an extraordinarily beautiful nymph named Daphne, the daughter of the river god Peneus. Cupid had known Daphne a long time and so he was aware that like so many other girls in the region, she had given her life and her virtue to Apollo’s virginal twin sister, the goddess Diana, and had taken a vow of chastity that prohibited her from making love to a man. Slyly, Cupid pondered what might happen if Apollo were to fall madly in love with such an honorable nymph.

And so, with spiteful wrath (this is not your usual Hallmark god), Cupid reached into his quiver and carefully selected two arrows with opposing powers —gold-tipped one that set its victim’s heart aflame with love, and a lead-tipped one that would extinguish any amorous desire in its target. Pulling his bowstring taut, Cupid aimed the gold-tipped projectile at Apollo. As the arrow took flight, it glistened in the afternoon sun and then embedded itself deeply into his heart. Next, he loaded the dull, lead-tipped arrow into his bow, and shot it at the chaste Daphne, knowing that it would cause her to utterly reject Apollo’s arrow-provoked amour.

Hiding in the shadow of Mount Parnassus, Cupid watched his handiwork unfold. As Apollo ran through the woods, he spotted the lovely Daphne in the distance. As he began to move closer to her, his body was inflamed with love and desire. Gaining ground on the nymph, he called out to her:

Stay, Sweet nymph! Oh stay! I am no foe to fear.

(“Hey, I’m Apollo. You are so beautiful! Haven’t we met somewhere before?”)

When Apollo grew yet nearer to Daphne, she noticed his flushed face and recognized his intentions in an instant. The nymph turned and took flight, but Apollo continued his chase, calling out again:

I’m the lord of Delphi. I am the son of Jupiter. By me
Things future, past and present are revealed;
I shape the harmony of songs and strings.

(“I’m an artist!
I can recite poetry!
My father is very important…
Let’s just go for a coffee and get to know each other, OK?)

Hearing this, Daphne quickened her pace, for Cupid’s lead-tipped arrow had made the very sight of the god repulsive to her. But Apollo sped up and rapidly gained ground on Daphne. As he closed the gap between them, the nymph was compelled to take drastic measures. Ahead, in the distance, she saw the swift river Peneus (who also happened to be her father) and she called out to him in despair:

Help, Father, help!

(Help, Father, help!)

Daphne begged her father to take from her the very thing that Apollo most desired—her beauty. In that divine moment Daphne’s prayers were answered. As Apollo—who was only a half a step behind the nymph—reached out to grab the torso of his sweet prize, he realized that something was amiss. Expecting to feel the soft, smooth skin of a young maiden, he grasped the tough, crusted bark of a tree instead! A metamorphosis was underway: Daphne’s father had saved her by turning her into a tree! As Apollo stood watching with dismay, bark began to envelope Daphne’s skin, her hair turned to branches bearing fresh green leaves, and her toes took root and embedded themselves in the earth. In a matter of seconds, the young and beautiful Daphne was no more.

Apollo was stunned to discover that the girl he so loved had become a laurel tree (in Greek called a daphne), but he swore his allegiance nonetheless. He could feel the beating of her heart through the rough bark that now covered her body, and so he delicately plucked leaves from her branches and crowned his head, proclaiming:

At least, sweet laurel, you shall be my tree.

(You look good, but there goes my Saturday night!)

Fast forward to the seventeenth century: the young sculptor, Gianlorenzo Bernini is commissioned to depict Daphne’s miraculous metamorphosis in a life-size marble sculpture for art collector and Cardinal Nephew, Scipione Borghese. The commission presented Bernini with two challenges: first, there was the difficulty of demonstrating the transformation of a human body in a material as hard and unyielding as marble; second, the sculptor was to compete with the story’s ancient author, giving visual form to Ovid’s inspiring poetry.

Despite these difficulties, Bernini’s incomparable talent enabled him to create a sculpture that evokes the tension of the chase, Daphne’s fear, and the wonder of the bodily metamorphosis. His sculpture leaves the viewer in breathless awe, for it embodies the process by which Daphne’s human form was transformed into that of a tree. Shaped by Bernini’s chisel, marble is no longer a cold, hard material, but becomes soft, pliable, and clay-like—a substance that can be modeled into human flesh, tree bark, curly hair, and crisp new leaves.

The seventeenth-century public was stunned by Bernini’s rendition of this story. Though Apollo’s love remained unrequited, Bernini’s sculpture won him the adoration of the Romans, who began to salute the twenty-something sculptor in the streets with the title of “maestro.”

Bernini's Apollo & Daphne in the Galleria Borghese, Rome

05
Jun

Water in Venice: 100% Public

100% Pubblica: Initiative to Reduce Bottled Water Consumption

As summer sets in, tourists visiting Venice will find fountains feature unexpectedly high on this year’s sightseeing tours as the city council aims to reduce waste in the world’s biggest consumer of mineral water.

A new initiative to cut down on bottled water consumption, called “100% Public,” is being launched today, World Environment Day.

Tourists are being given empty water bottles with the message “Don’t throw me away, re-use me!” and a map indicating the 122 fountains flowing with water from the city’s aqueducts (see below), inviting them to quench their thirst directly from the source.

Venice was chosen for the launch of the scheme due to its obvious links with water and its role as a tourist center. However there are plans to take the project to Italy’s other major cities.

Italians are the world’s largest consumers of bottled water, even though the natural water in Italy’s fountains is some of the cleanest in the world.

The campaign offers people the chance to cut waste and save money at the same time.

(via Reuters, from an article by Olivia Scarlett and Paul Casciato)

Map of Water Fountains in Venice

03
Jun

Pizza Mysteries: The Case of the Stolen Starter

Neil Gower & Tom Downey Graphic Mystery

While recently lounging about in the Noi hair salon (everyone at the eCool Compound LOVES the Noi Boys on Piazza del Popolo) and reading old magazine–like the February 2008 issue of Conde Naste Traveller–we came across a most wonderful graphic novella about Naples and its unbelievably good pizza.

A mystery created by Tom Downey and Neil Gower, “The Case of the Stolen Starters” takes you on a hunt for one of Naples treasures–the perfect slice of pizza–and on a delectable tour of other insider spots.

It’s a great read that revolves around a search for a missing mound of dough used as a starter for pizza crust, patron saints, insider deals, and the ultimate power of the Neapolitan mama. You won’t want to miss it.

So, click over to the Conde Naste website where you can download the novella in three parts. You’ll be hungry by the time you’re through reading–and ready to board a plane or train to Napoli.





 

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