01 October 2011

Ciao Ottobre!

So last night we didn't end up going to the park for the pizza/cheese tasting. It just wasn't going to happen. The others went out to go dancing. I stayed in and had a cup of tea and nursed my cold. Sadly I didn't even get to bed that early because I was messing around online. Silly Hallie.

This morning everyone was up and awake and bustling around by 10, which is a little early for my roommates (especially after a late night out). Sophia and Julie went to the Prati market while Kat and Ginny went to see Bernini's St. Teresa in Ecstasy. I was not that awake, I felt better when Nico woke up after me. I did some work and took a nice long shower this morning. Right when I started to get hungry Nico asked if I wanted to go on a picnic today!! Perfect! So after everyone returned we all grabbed pizza and a bottle of wine and went to the Pamphilj Gardens (different from the palazzo pamphilj but the same family). Isotta and Silvio, two other ISCs, met up with us. Isotta brought McDonald's for her lunch!! Shame! Nico scolded her for being a bad Italian and eating a McChicken (yes that's what they call them here). The cool thing for Italian girls to do is have a hair wrap with a little bell at the end, Isso and Nico each had them when we arrived. So Isotta wrapped up Julie, Sophia, and Kat's hair over the course of three hours while we all just sat and chatted, some did readings for school. I laid down for a moment after lunch and I was out. When I woke up from my unexpected nap Nico was showing off her Poi (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poi_(performance_art)) skills. Any ICFC people might know the fire dances that have taken place. There are two small balls with a string from each to a hand, so one in the left and another in the right and then the balls are swung around in complex patterns. Nico just got them recently so she is amazing in our opinion but only knows a couple designs really well. It's fun to watch! She tried teaching Sophia and I. I could only complete one pattern with one hand, not the two together! My ISC is so cool.

Nico teaching me

Nico on a roll

Julie's hairwrap


















After the park we all trooped home and stopped at the grocery store because tomorrow is Sunday!! It's hard to find food on Sundays. More homework, some chose to nap. Tonight we're going out with the Prati guys and Claudio to the Animal Social Club?? It should prove interesting. I've been feeling better all day, I hope I don't overdo it tonight but I really miss going out with my friends and roomies!!  I'm going to make the most delicious dinner with my produce from the market yesterday! Ciao per adesso!






Kat snapped a picture while I was napping

30 September 2011

Field Studies are the Most Exhausting Slices of Heaven

11. Ho bisogno un campione

Nico is back! Last night Nico, Claudio, and Isotta came over to relax and hang out. Claudio went to a graduation party and Nico and Isotta brought take away pizza for dinner!! More fabulous delicious pizza! I'm never eating Vocelli's again. We had a fun apartment/girls night at dinner. Afterwards everyone headed out to the  clubs except for Kat, Ginny, and I. Ginny had just gotten home from a full day of classes and stayed home to check in with the parentals while Kat and I hoofed it to Prati for a quiet movie night with Mattly, Tom, and Pepperoni. Nothing too thrilling, just some KungFu Panda and home cause we were both tired.

Thursday morning I had to wake up just a touch earlier than usual to allow enough time to get to my Conservation field study. I rolled out of bed to find Ginny dressed and heading out the door already!! She chose to walk while I planned on taking the bus to Santa Maria Maggiore, our meeting point [fyi it's the tallest point in Rome and a good 45 min walk from our apartment]. I felt accomplished when I met up with Ginny at the church at 9:32 (meeting time was 9:30, that's close!) having figured out the busing situation by myself. Eventually we find 4 other girls from our class wandering around S.Maria Mag. but none of us can find our teacher! We called Federica and she came to meet us, she was just making sure the church we wanted to go to was open and not under restoration or anything. I had forgotten that because this destination was so far away from everyone she gave us a 30 min grace period, our meeting time was pushed back to 10. So I was even early!! We eventually become a group of 8 but I think we were missing 5 or so people from our class. Poor Ginny stepped on a broken beer bottle while waiting for everyone and got a minor but painful cut on her foot.

Finally, Basilica Santa Prassede, this hidden treasure right next to one of the most famous churches in Rome. The apse and arches of this church is overwhelmingly brilliant! The mosaics are from the 9th century, not very naturalistic but mosaics tend to be rather linear. The colors are so vibrant! While our teacher was explaining the processes of making the tessere and applying them to the surfaces I just stared. Thankfully I know most of the information already (parents, don't worry, I'm not failing) and I could just sit admiring the beauty.


The mosaics

The altar
Basilica Santa Prassede



After examining the altar we went to a specific chapel that has more fabulous mosaics with lots of gold tessere. The artist used the space so well because the angels/apostles are placed on the pendentives so as their body is depicted on the ceiling it looks like they get bigger or taller as they reach the center where there is a depiction of Christ. I feel like I keep repeating myself but I'm running out of words to describe all the awe-some inspiring beautiful creations I get to see everyday. Besides the breathtaking mosaics yesterday I fell   in love with marble floors.... they do NOT get enough credit! Sadly the marble is mostly spolie from Roman or Greek buildings that were torn down to be replaced with Christian churches, but prepare yourself for lots of floor pictures.

Above the entrance to the chapel

These popes were restored and so they look a little
flatter and nicer than the original

Ceiling

Angels on the pendentives

My attempt at a close up shot of the mosaic

This chapel is also where a relic is housed. It's a column said to be the one that Jesus was tied to while he was being whipped during the passion of Christ. It's an interesting possibility if that's true! There were fantastic frescoes all over the church below the clerestory and on every wall that wasn't already decorated.

Fresco showing the column

My professor obviously is well educated in the field of conservation, and in fact that's her profession while she teaches us on the side! So while at the church she basically pointed out all the flaws of poor restoring or how the art is breaking down due to age and the environment. We learned that to determine the severity of a frescoes damage, when the paint is peeling away, you have to knock on it like trying to find a secret door! She said nothing works the same as a human hand, there is no tool to knock with, so at the end of the day her knuckles are raw but she has a sense of satisfaction because she has resolved the problems.

Federica knocking on a random fresco
in a church!
 We made a pit stop in yet another chapel to examine an oil wall painting that is in very good condition. Normally wall paintings that are well preserved tend to be frescoes. That has to do with the types of chemical reactions that form or break over time and the compositions of the binders... Orgo with Kerri Lee is really helping me out in this class. I just thought this painting was well done and the realism of Jesus' hand and the tears on Mary's face blew my mind! I don't understand how the artist managed to paint something that is clear







It was a great field study to say the least. Each field study class is two hours long and normally Federica likes to visit multiple locations. I enjoyed this change of only one church because there was so much to see and she went so in depth with her descriptions and information. The best part however was that at the end of this all it was only 11:30!!! I had another field study to go to Forum Boarium! Ginny, Madison, and I grabbed some pizza between the two field studies and then met up with Gianni for Forma Urbis. We explored the area along the river banks at the Southern end of Campus Martius.

On the left is the ruins of an ancient roman Temple of Apollo,
behind that is a brown medieval house, next door
is a renaissance house, and on the right
a baroque church.... awesome.

Ginny at the Theatre of Marcellus


Mussolini saved the theatre from collapse
but added these fasces, bundles of sticks with
an axe in the middle. Origin of the words fascism and faggot
Theater Marcellus

We visited the Theatre of Marcellus which is built similar to the Colosseum with Doric columns on the bottom arcade, Ionic on the next level, and Corinthian which has fallen off the top level. Gianni, my teacher, has actually helped in the excavation of the depot inside the theater today. On top in the middle ages someone built a home that would be easily defensible, and now it's an apartment building, on top of this treasured Roman ruin. I think that would be a pretty cool place to live. It was a hot hot day and thankfully Gianni was stopping in the shade whenever he had something long to say. Next we walked over to San Nicola in Carcere (meaning St. Nicholas in Prison) which was built over one of three temples lined up near the theater. There were two Ionic (probably Temple of Spes and Juno respectively) and then a little Doric one tacked on where there is now a busy intersection (Juno Sospita)!! So strange to think cars are driving over the same location that a few thousand years ago people came to worship! This part of Rome in particular was very swampy before the Cloaca Maxima was built to drain out all extra water into the Tiber. The flooding used to be so bad that the reason the fountain at the bottom of the Spanish Steps is in the shape of a boat is because a boat floated up there and when the water receded was stranded! That's not close to the Tiber! Anyways back to St. Nick in Prison! We went inside because they saved some of the columns from the original temples and built walls around them so they look like engaged columns in the church. Also this church has zero matching columns along the nave because they were all stolen from Roman temples and they are mismatched with stolen capitals too. A cool collection but again, sad :(    First thing I noticed when I went inside were not the columns but rather the ceiling.

SO BLUE!


The church has some serious Baroque overtones haha but this ceiling is my favorite so far!!! The blue ties it all together so it's not as overwhelming as the gilding swirly-dirly overload of some other ceilings. *sigh*  I love it.


Gianni gets just as easily distracted as we do. He has studied marble and quarries in depth, like more than is healthy for any human I believe. But this is useful because he knows so much!! So with the eclectic mix of columns he was teaching us about different carving techniques and the pros and cons of using each type. 

My first glimpse of alabaster
After our little detour we got back to the lesson plan and visited the Temple of Portunus, the god of the port. Last semesters classes couldn't see it because it has been under restoration and cleaning for a while. Sadly the plaster and marble dust is hardly visible, but the structure is so cute! It's trying so hard to pretend to look Greek-ish when it's clearly Roman in every way. If you've studied the differences between Roman and Greek temples you can see the high podium, single entry point, and engaged columns that scream Roman!! Along with no marble but only local Roman stone used. It's just so cute how they tried to look Greek.
Looking a little shabby after 2086 years
Picture from the back

Right next door, like from where that picture was taken, is the Temple of Hercules. It is believed an olive oil vendor dedicated this tholos temple. It was of course preserved because it was turned into a Christian church for a while, and is now restored to the best of our abilities to it's original structure. 
Large capital

Temple of Hercules
Last stop was the Santa Maria in Cosmedin, anyone recognize this name?? It's where la Bocca della Verita is located!! Of course we didnt' get in the huge line to pay precious euro to stick our hand in the mouth of a sewer grate, oh yes Gianni told us it was a grate to the cloaca maxima. So we walked past la Bocca della Verita and into the church, which by the way, follows the knees/shoulders codes the strictest out of any I've been to yet (ok well less than St. Peter's). Thankfully my first field study at a church meant I was prepared unlike some of my classmates who had to don ugly plaid scarves. There were more awesome columns to inspect here, again stolen from all over Rome. We were really looking at the Basilica layout of the church which Sturd drummed into my head back in sophomore year of high school. I felt bad because many of the kids in my class are taking a very similar class called Roman as a Living Museum. Poor Hope and Pepperoni had been to this church literally the day before. Oh well, they just get to overdose on Roma!  Ok here come the floor pictures!!! 

In the Basilica Santa Prassede

Prassede


Santa Maria in Cosmedin

Obsessed

Gianni doing his marble thing yet again!!
By the end of these two trips I was exhausted and it was only 2pm!! I came home to grab a snack and nap/study. Italian at 4:30 was a quiz which I think went well, not my best work but I think I'll be happy with my grade. After the quiz I stopped by Filippo's on the way home because it was my "bread night". We decided that since we all love eating bread with dinner each night of the week someone would buy the half loaf or whatever for the apartment. This way Mon-Friday we all can have bread with dinner and left overs with lunch or for a snack. Thursdays are going to tired me out but I'll perk up when I grab some of that delicious bread! 

After dinner I was wiped out. This cold is still bugging me!! So Tom and Sara and Michael came over to make plans to go out and see Nico at work! I really wanted to go to her wine/dessert bar with them because it's so small she's normally the only person there. I really wasn't feeling like that was a good idea so I just climbed into bed once everyone had left and fell asleep after a quick episode of HIMYM. Apparently it was a  lot of fun and the wine and desserts were fantastic, I'll have to go back. We want to try the aparativi there too, where you pay a set amount for a drink and get lots of snacks/munchies with your order.

This morning Ginny and I woke up earlier than the rest because we didn't go out. So we headed back to the market in Prati which I am starting to love. I got all my veggies for the week, sausage, and eggs for 8 euro! Much much cheaper than the supermarkets, but we do have to haul everything back across the bridge home. It's about 20-30 minute walk but since we get back around 1 every time it's hot hot hot outside. I love spending my Friday mornings like this because then I am out and about, moving around instead of lazing on the couch, and I come home with yummy new foods just in time for lunch! Then I've spent the rest of today doing homework, writing THIS!, napping, laundry, skyping.... just a relaxing day.

I think tonight we might go to a pizza/cheese tasting fair in a park, and maybe a discoteca/social center type place with Nico if she can get off of work. I might call it quits after the park, there is music later in park too so it'll be a while.  ok this took a long time to write and upload all the pictures for the blog. More later kiddos!

28 September 2011

It's Been a Blah Kind of Day

10. Ambulance/Police sirens!
to be continued...

Nothing too exciting to report, sorry. Went to class this morning and learned more about Giotto and moving into the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles in Renaissance which I'm looking forward to. My teacher, Pier Paolo (so proud he's named after Rome's two Saints), really likes me because I can converse with him in Italian and I'm taking other art history courses. He's fun to listen to in class because he has a great mastery of the English language and when he is searching for words I think he is trying for a simple word to get his point across and then he pulls out some super technical or elaborate word I have only used twice in my life! Today he got really wound  up about the distinct differences between Late Gothic/International Gothic Style vs. Classical when it comes to Renaissance influences and he ran out of words. "The body looks like... like.. a body. A human body with weight and... and .. earth pulling on the weight" He chuckles because he knows how silly it sounds but he's making very good points we can all follow, they just sound a little goofy.

I came home and did some laundry and made lunch and did homework. Just killing time before my 4:30 Italian class today. Tomorrow we have a quiz, ooooh aaah! So I'll be studying more tonight.

Last night Kat and Sophia went to see The Magic Flute with their Italian Theater class and Ginny and Julie took advantage of free museum night and went to the Galleria Borghese . I wasn't feeling up to the excursion and I will visit all the museums that were open for my different art history classes anyways. I've been a bum this week! I need to light a fire under me and be more active out in Roma. Snoble was scolding me yesterday for still not having fixed my camera!

NICO COMES HOME TONIGHT!!! She's been bouncing around between her jobs and studying for her midterms and today is her last test! We're so eager to have her around more often and to switch to almost entirely Italian! Maybe she'll bring Syria over tonight too.

I hope everything is well in your life :)

27 September 2011

My Centro Roma List

This is my list:

1. Grande Peroni
2. I hate door 6
3. Dov'e il fiume?
4. Black feet
5. Student/girlfriend discount at Filippo's
6. Julie's hair flip
7. Cuckold/Rock On gesture
8. Bagno for the bread
9. Sempre piu scale
10... to be continued

So I am happy as a clam because I made the most satisfying lunch today! I bought salad greens and chopped red peppers, carrots, moz, and a little chicken on top then drizzled some of that good old EVOO (extra virgin olive oil) and balsamic vinegar on top. The oil/vinegar adjustment was one of my concerns before I left the US. No salad dressings?!?!?! But it's so yummy and goes on salads, bread, tomato and moz, pasta, basically anything! Still haven't gotten sick of it yet.

Today my Baroque class had an intensive Caravaggio field study! First to San'Agostino to see Madonna of the Pilgrims. This is the first time I've run into problems with the lighting. In many churches they protect the paintings by leaving them in the dark and then the visitors have to pay a euro or so into a slot that briefly illuminates the work. I'm happy the paintings are being preserved but San'Agostino in particular was a rip off. I've never studied the work before and so I got the full beauty of it without random facts or previous slide images of it slipping into my head. It's fun that I will always compare slides I see in the future with my memory of the real deal.

Obviously these pictures don't
do the works justice, but it's an idea

Second stop on our trek was to see Caravaggio's first public works. We would have gone to see them first except San Luigi dei Francesi (that is St. Louis of the French) doesn't open until 10am! So inside I had another fabulous "I love my life and studying in Rome and art history is amazing" moment when I saw Caravaggio's three works: Martyrdom of St. Matthew, St. Matthew with the Angel, and The Calling of St. Matthew!! The Calling of St. Matthew is just the most Caravaggio-y painting out there! It perfectly displays his symbolic, artistic, and creative/innovative talents. I really liked seeing all these paintings in the context they were intended because the simplicity of The Calling is placed facing The Martyrdom and they contrast just like his famous chiaroscuro. My professor is a conversationalist and pointed out the work she recently completed in the chapel right next to the one dedicated to St. Matthew and I'm so impressed with her dedication to viewing works in the context they were originally intended. Basically this one chapel had four different window light sources that were boarded up for safety a long time ago and nobody ever took them down. This ruined the glowing brilliance of the chapel and just a week or two ago she and her colleagues finished restoring the windows to their original condition!!!

The Calling of St. Matthew
The Martyrdom of St. Matthew

The chapel with Caravaggio's works
This is the chapel my professor restored
I'll try to find a recent picture with the
windows opened

Last destination on our trek was a familiar one! We went to Piazza del Popolo to Santa Maria del Popolo where I have visited with Ginny, Sophia, Kat, and Julie. We looked at the Conversion of St. Paul on the way to Damascus (not to be confused with Caravaggio's first work "The Conversion of St. Paul") and The Crucifixion of St. Peter. Both were wonderful to admire again with the knowledge my professor was spouting out. I also learned that the central painting is a (not very good) Annibale Carracci whom we will be disucussing a lot in class and I'm sure visiting more of his works.

Crucifixion of St. Peter

Assumption of the Virgin by Carracci

After our adventures with Baroque Julie, Kat, Hope, and Pepperoni and I went back to IES for classes like Forma Urbis! Gianni spoke about Estrucan tombs for a little bit and Circuses (not as fun as you might think, imagine gladiators and such) and temple orders. Some of this I already knew so I felt smart and the rest was interesting. We're going on a field study on Thursday to see a couple things on the Paletine Hill I believe. Getting ready for Italian now, it's my short one hour class today but it starts at 5! Nobody's perfect

26 September 2011

"Normal" Life in Rome

So no karaoke last night. After my readings I was ready for bed and just went to sleep. I love my sleeping skills. I can fall asleep with lights on and people talking in the other room, I don't notice when my roomies come home or for the most part when they leave in the morning (but really it's a rarity that I'm not up in with the first wave for classes).

Today wasn't too thrilling. I found out that my Baroque class is going to Palazzo Doria Pamphilj, but my prof is super glad  I went already because apparently we only get an hour and part of that will be presentations. So I'm glad I get the chance to go back and we studied several of the works I saw yesterday in class today! yay!!! So I had Baroque, Conservation, and Renaissance for my short hour long classes today, tomorrow involves an onsite field study for baroque then my short forma urbis class.

This isn't very exciting but I'm slowly trying to catch up to Julie with HIMYM (How I Met Your Mother). I watched a few episodes today and got to the part where Barney and Robyn start getting together!!! American tv while in Italy, I'm ashamed! I chatted with Snoble a little bit today about her weekend in Ithaca and got a quick update on my friends/hockey bros. I did some grocery shopping. We're planning a trip to Florence for the weekend between Italian midterms and area study midterms so I can see Giotto's bell tower. WE ARE DISCUSSING GIOTTO IN EVERY CLASS!!! He's my favorite artist. In Renaissance we're going in depth with the Scrovegni Chapel and I'm super pumped because that is my Mecca while I'm here!! Hoping to go in the near future to Padova!! Ahhh Giotto, you're my man.

Pepperoni and Tom came over for a bit this evening, I'm going to go back to socializing after this post. Sorry not too exciting and no pictures. More tomorrow!

25 September 2011

Weekends are flying by!

Only 12 more to go! That's really scary/sad! We're filling up weekends with plans as quickly as we can but it's getting to the point we have to start choosing where we really want to go and prioritizing. Kat and I (and probably some others) are eager to get to Napoli and have some pizza because I have some familial connections there. There is a trip planned for Amsterdam (Hi Alexis!) that I think I'll skip to try and see Florence or Venice or Sienna. It's been a month but hardly feels like it.


Yesterday was spent entirely with the puppy (cucciolo) Syria. We played with her in the morning over breakfast and alternated between homework and playing with her. We ohhed and awwwed while she curled up to nap. We had to scold her when she misbehaved (not house trained yet!) and we took for a walk up the geniculum. That was a beautiful place to watch the sun go down over the city. We got hungry quickly and scampered home to whip up something. Last night I had my zucchini from the market with tomatoes and left over rosemary lemon chicken. After dinner I watched Pocahontas in Italian just for kicks and giggles :) It was surprisingly easy to follow and the little girl inside me was happy. EVA RAE!!! I walked past the Disney store on Via del Corso and thought of you and missed your adorable self.  After the movie Aven and Pepperoni came over to go out to a wine bar. One of the best/most comprehensive wine selections are at Vino Olio which is very very close to us in il centro. We let our red expert Pepperoni pick our bottle to share but Kat found the white she really liked at the tasting she attended. We're super cultured haha


They continued their night and I went on home to sleep cause I was tired. That's when I found out lots of my friends chose this weekend to visit IC! Jealous I couldn't see them all, but there will be plenty of time in the spring when I am home with my holmesies!


This morning I slept rather late, whoops! But it's the first time I slept past 10am so I don't feel too bad, I'm not missing out on much of Roman mornings. Kat, Sophia, and I were the only ones home because Nico went to study, Julie was in Tuscany, and Ginny was at work! We decided to try and see a museum today so we went to Palazzo Doria Pamphilj which was AMAZING! We got the student discount of 7euro instead of 10 and it comes with a giant cell phone looking handset that gives you a tour guided by Prince Jonathan's voice, one person in the family haha it was great! I half listened to the tour but it allowed you to be selective and I could choose what rooms or paintings I wanted to hear about. Pepperoni, Kat, Sophia and I loved it! There was a cute little garden area and then the palace had probably twenty rooms open to the public. The bath was the first thing we saw and it (like everything else) was so elaborate. There were mosaics everywhere and every ceiling and wall was painted where there weren't priceless works of art! This family has had maybe 4 popes and a whole slew of cardinals so they are very wealthy. The replica of St. Peter's that is in Piazza Navona (see earlier post) was actually theirs. Every inch of wall space was covered with paintings and it was breathtaking and lovely. I would have visited a museum to see those works and I would have paid to visit that house, and they were together!!! Defiantly something I would recommend anyone and everyone doing when they visit Rome. It's easy to get to, cheap, and soooo worth the money. It wasn't crowded either so we could take our time. Sadly pictures weren't allowed so here is all I could find on the internet, look up more! 

the courtyard
Landscape paintings!

One giant room full of statues from all different time periods

Three giant corridors with paintings everywhere

Velázquez's famous Pope Innocent X!
It was next to Bernini's bust of him too!
Friar Lippi!!!!

The bath
Kat, Me and Pepperoni enjoying the sound of Prince Jon's voice


After that we had to stop and get gelato across the street, vanilla tastes like yellow cake, yummmm! Then walked around more, just up and down via del corso. We went to the Borghese Gardens to hangout with Claudio, Mattia, and Mattly. They brought devil sticks and hackysacks to juggle (hackysacking doesn't exist in Italy) and a slackline! I felt like I was in the academic quad at IC! haha Then home for dinner, grilled cheeeeeese! Tonight my friends are going to an art festival while i catch up on some readings, and I might meet up with them at Scholar's for karaoke again :)   so off to do homework! ciao tutti

Mattia and Claudio on the slackline
Mattly on the slackline and Claudio with the devil sticks
Even I tried! but not gracefully