Visualizzazione post con etichetta Wallace. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta Wallace. Mostra tutti i post

martedì 14 giugno 2011

This Week in Castelraimondo

San Severino before the parade
Or last week. I also have to catch up on this weekend and do my homework, among other things. So, a quick overview: last week we did an evening trip to San Severino, where we had dinner at a convent and saw a medieval parade, which was pretty neat and very entertaining. Our teacher Gugu's little niece Cica (Frederica) kept us entertained too with her rapid-fire Italian. We baked "biscotti con i chips di cioccolato" as a typical American food for the cena internazionale at the school in town, and met the students there again (we had met them before at a karaoke/gelato party). We lost the competition to the Icelandic delegation, but they were really sweet (and they shared their Icelandic liquor) so no one minded much.

100-odd cookies

The garden in the convent


Matteo and Melanie in the parade


Cica

Professor Wallace came to stay in Castelraimondo for the week with his family, and he showed us around Assisi on Friday. I loved Assisi - there was a road sign as we drove in saying "Welcome to Assisi: City of Peace." We saw Giotto's incredible frescoes in the church of St. Francis, and the crypt where St. Francis is buried. Sadly we didn't have too much time there but I would have loved to explore the city more.

There were Franciscan monks everywhere in Assisi. I liked this one with a baseball cap.




Flowers everywhere



We returned to the villa and made dinner (weekends we're on our own, and we decided to stay based at the villa this one). We turned in early because we had to be up early (4:30) for our day trip with Edulingua people to Pisa, San Gimignano, and Siena on Saturday. Unfortunately most of the day was spent driving - it would have been better if we'd seen just cities in Tuscany that were closer and skipped Pisa, but va bene. It was easy enough to get on and off the bus instead of navigating the train system and paying for a hostel.



Yep, had to take the picture

I'm not a fan of Pisa, although I admit I didn't see any of it outside of the Piazza dei Miracoli. It was pretty overrun with tourists and vendors, but we took our Leaning Tower shots, went in the church (free prayer entrance again), and departed.
La Toscana - che bella!



Next stop was San Gimignano for lunch, which was a really cute town. The towers and architecture are beautiful, and the shops and food were great (a few of us bought pictures there, and went to "the world's best" gelateria).


Finally Siena to round off the day, where we saw San Domenico, which houses a relic of St. Catherine of Siena's (strangely - her head), the Duomo, which was amazingly beautiful (there's a wonderful Mary chapel to the side), the main piazza, and the shopping streets. Daryl and I wandered down one and stopped in pretty much every wine store. We also had some fun conversations in Italian with the shopkeepers, and I bought ricciarelli, delicious almond cookies that are a local specialty.


Candles for Santa Caterina di Siena

Duomo di Siena


Riciarelli

We clambered on the double decker bus again and got back to Castelraimondo by 11:30 - a long day, but a good one. Sunday we relaxed by the pool at the villa, and I read Love in the Time of Cholera, loaned to me by Elizabeth. (I finished it today - it was fantastic.)

Sunday night dinner - ordering the pizza was an adventure.
French fry pizza. Seriously.
Yesterday and today we were back to class as usual, but yesterday afternoon we took a trip to Urbino. Most things (the museum) were closed, but we walked around a bit, saw Raphael's birthplace and the university where Gugu went to school, bought gelato, and went home. I can't believe it's our last week here - on to Bologna this weekend, and Rimini next week. I don't want to leave. Although it will be nice to be somewhere where toilet paper isn't rationed.

Pierpaolo, who basically owns Castelraimondo

Church in Urbino

Gugu at his universita. Oh Gugu.

Urbino


I realize I haven't described many of the characters on this trip - Pierpaolo, Gugu, etc. - so I'll try to do that at some point.

mercoledì 8 giugno 2011

Firenze and the perks of being Catholic


“He looks around, around
He sees angels in the architecture
Spinning in infinity
He says Amen and Hallelujah!”
- “You Can Call Me Al,” Paul Simon


It's nice being Catholic in cities where they like to charge tourists a lot, even to enter a church. And I fit in quite a lot of churches this weekend. But you can skip the line and/or the price to go to mass or say a prayer, which is nice.


Me and Brunelleschi, the architect of the dome

Florence is a wonderful city, probably one of my favorites in Italy. A few of us went a day early to be able to see as much as possible. We got there Thursday night, had dinner in the Piazza della Signoria, walked around a bit, and went out.

Hey there Ghiberti doors!
Friday morning we went to mass at the Duomo, which was incredible. I was the only Catholic in the group, but the other girls decided to come along - mass is in the part of the church where the tourists don't get to go. I loved it - the dome is beautiful from underneath, and I could understand a fair bit of the Italian mass from the words I've learned and context. Afterwards Caroline and I went to the Bargello museum, where Donatello's David and St. George are, among other interesting things. There's a reason that people go to see the other famous David in Florence and not this one, but having seen Michelangelo's, I thought it would be great to see this too. And to experience again the in class/in person understanding. Afterwards we got lunch the Florence/Italy way - grab a panino and eat it sitting outside or walking around (because they charge you to sit down). The only problem is there aren't that many places to sit in Florence, which is why the palazzos built by the great families like the Medicis would provide stone outcroppings to sit on outside their buildings (and then remind you how great they were for providing such a service).

I love this kid. The parents are oblivious, but he's reading the map.

Also loved the fruit stands in Florence. I'm going to miss the produce/food in Italy.

We walked around some more, wandering the city and checking out the leather markets. I also got to the post office to finally mail my postcards - the Italian post office is very confusing, but if you know/figure out what you're supposed to be doing, surprisingly efficient. We strolled across the Ponte Vecchio - and back - to look in every shop window along it. Caroline and I were drooling over the stunning displays of gold and jewelry. We also got to the Boboli Gardens, which are really beautiful and peaceful - a lot of French tourists, and not many American ones (same at the Medici Chapel - maybe the French know the better places to go? Or maybe my tastes are closer to the French tourists'). The island fountain there was really neat.

On the Ponte Vecchio


The rest of the group got in Friday afternoon, and we met up with them for a nice dinner at a restaurant that had blueberry steak - a great combination.

Three preparations of steak (la bistecca ai mirtilli is on the left)


Saturday we met up with Professor Wallace, an Art History professor from our school who took us on a tour of Florence. He specializes in Renaissance art and Michelangelo, and there really isn't a better person to learn from. I can't wait for his class in the fall. We started in the Piazza della Signoria and walked around to see churches and palazzos and have him explain the history, architecture, and art. He pointed out the insignia of the great families of Florence that I never would have understood otherwise. I felt like I understood the city so much better after our tour - I could look around and understand why there were iron rings and projections from the buildings, and why loggias were so important. I won't go over it all here, but it was fantastic.

Piazza della Signoria
Wallace and the Baptistery doors

On our lunch break from the tour we met a really nice artist and a few of us bought paintings/etchings from him - and he painted us business cards. We ate our panini outside a church with organ music drifting out of the open doors (and peeked in for a moment - even the small neighborhood churches are incredible).

On the tour we had seen the outside of the Duomo and Baptistery, and gone inside Orsanmichele (important granary and church), the Sassetti Chapel, and the Medici Palazzo, among other things.
Most people were tired after the tour and took naps, but I'm not a napper and my feet weren't tired yet (it hit me the next day). Instead I walked around on my own, getting mistaken for a local since I wasn't in a large group (yes!...but they knew as soon as I spoke). I also got to give directions to a cute old French man (yay French!). He looked delighted that I spoke it - I could tell from his confused expression when he asked the question that he was trying to say it in Italian but didn't remember. (J'ai la meme probleme, Monsieur). I did a whirlwind tour of San Lorenzo (because I thought it was the Medici Chapel that Wallace had recommended, whoops) - I went in the prayer entrance there and lit a candle. I don't know how many candles I lit this weekend (quite a few), but I think the total church count was 8. I'm pretty happy with that - I love holy spaces, and these are, in a way, mine.


After San Lorenzo I went to Santa Croche - I didn't go in because I didn't want to pay the fee (although in retrospect I should have; I didn't know there were Giottos in there!). I just wanted to see it to have a Room With a View moment - Santa Croche is the setting of an important scene (although the piazza was hosting an opera that weekend, so there was a large stage/seating taking up most of it. Bonus: we could hear it from our windows at the hostel!). I also had my happy literature moment walking along the Arno. I really wish I'd brought that book, but I packed in a rush and couldn't find it.
Under a loggia
Afterwards I read my FT Life and Arts under the loggia in the Piazza della Signoria for a while, which was lovely. I ended up people/tourist watching and soaking in the city. The loggia was a meeting/resting place for tourists, couples and people reading on their own, people sketching the statues, musicians playing soothing Italian songs on guitar; public space, as intended by the Medici, for the city of Florence to gather. (Before the Medici it was the symbol of democracy in Florence, where people could participate, but so much for that.) It seems like we packed so much into the days, but we started all of them early (and ended late, too).


We had dinner at the apartment of another professor in Florence - the art school's program was just beginning while we were there, so we got to meet up with other students. It was a great dinner, and we stood on her balcony with a wonderful view of the Duomo, talking until almost everyone had left.

Ponte Vecchio before sunrise (and tourists)

The Arno - reminded me of Monet/Van Gogh
Van Gogh's Starry Night Over the Rhone (vs. Sunrise Over the Arno)

Sunday, our last morning in Florence, a few of us woke up at 4:45 to see the sunrise over the city. Caroline, Matt, Daryl, Marietta and I walked to Piazzale Michelangelo, across the Arno and above the city, for a fantastic view. It was a hike up, but absolutely worth it. We walked back down for breakfast and mass at the Duomo again (this time with Matt, Marietta and Caroline). Once again it was lovely, and this time (I guess because it was Sunday) there were helpful multilingual pamphlets.




We met an older priest named Alexander, who came over to talk to us before the mass. He was enormously friendly, and talked in a mixture of Italian and English of which I somehow understood most.  He talked about joy before the mass began, and he had one of those calm, joyful faces that I associate with the peace of deep faith. His face lit up - not because of anything, it just was. He asked us to pray for him because he was having an operation in a few days, and I did and will. He thought he was going to paradise soon, and I believe it of him, if anyone.