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1001 Ways to Die (12) – Alvaro Mutis Jaramillo, Colombian, Writer and Poet

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Alvaro Mutis, Colombian Writer and Poet

Alvaro Mutis, Colombian Writer and Poet

Alvaro Mutis Jaramillo, one of my absolute favorite writers of all times, died on Sunday 22 September 2013 in Mexico City, aged 90.

His wife, Carmen Miracle,  was quoted as saying that Alvaro Mutis died in hospital from a cardio-respiratory problem.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos sent his condolences after Mutis’ death was confirmed by the cultural commission Sunday night.

“The millions of friends and admirers of Alvaro Mutis profoundly lament his death,” Santos wrote. “All of Colombia honors him.”

Colombian writer Gustavo Alvarez Gardeazabal called him “a remarkable narrator, remarkable poet and remarkable friend.”

I wrote about him back in 2010: An introduction first, Alvaro Mutis, and then Fragments.

Today in his memory I would like to share some exerpts (presented below in italics) from his interview by Francisco Goldman published in BOMB 74/Winter 2001.

Mutis was born in Colombia, the son of a diplomat, but he became a citizen of the world.

Tramp Steamer

Tramp Steamer

I am just passing through.

“I traveled with my family from the age of two. We went to Brussels. My father was in the Colombian diplomatic service and we were there for nine years. We traveled to Colombia by sea for vacations. Those trips were wonderful for me. They were like an extended holiday, because on a ship you are not responsible for anything. All you have to do is coexist with the sea and its life and watch it all go by. And again, when I worked for Standard Oil as Colombian head of public relations for five years, I traveled on oil tankers and had interesting experiences and met extremely curious people, many of whom appear in my novellas. So I loved traveling and moving around. And interestingly, without actively trying, I have always had jobs that forced me to move around. For over 23 years, I worked for Twentieth Century Fox and then Columbia Pictures as sales manager for the television division in Latin America, selling sitcoms and specials and made-for-TV movies. And I went from capital to capital to capital: Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, to Chile and back through Argentina, Brazil, Venezuela, Puerto Rico and then back to Los Angeles. So my life became a long trip and I met thousands of people, in all different kinds of situations. And this was like a continuation of what I had experienced as a child. In this way I lost the sense of belonging to a particular country. I know that I am Colombian and will be until I die, and there are landscapes in Colombia that I love and am fascinated by, and they appear in my poetry, but I don’t feel a commitment to any one country because, after all, I’m just passing through.”

A hopeless view of the world

 ”I’ve never been involved in politics. I’ve never voted. I have never believed and have no faith in the intentions of a man who wants to make life better for all men. I think this just leads to concentration camps and Stalinist purges, the Inquisition and all of that horror. I believe that man is a species one should be very suspicious of. Now, I have no bitterness, but I am not going to change things, and I don’t want to change them. I accept them as they are, and that is how I live. So, it is natural that Maqroll (note: Maqroll is the key character in his novels), without being my exact reflection—which he is not at all—should have my hopeless view of the world.”

Mutis with writer Garcia Marquez and sculptor Botero

Mutis with writer Garcia Marquez and sculptor Botero

I say no to things

“But he (note: he refers to Maqroll), unlike Saint Francis, does not want to make this renunciation into a regimen for others or for a community. He says no to things precisely because of his philosophy of not trying to change anyone—each person is the way he is and that’s it. Now, if I were to load up on—as Maqroll would say—luxury items and objects, and these objects were to define me, I would be forced to stay still, not move. This doesn’t suit me; I don’t need anything.”

On women

“He (Maqroll) has a great admiration for women and he realizes that they see much more deeply than we men do, and know much more than we do, and that the best thing is to listen to them and do as they say. He always creates a sense of complicity with the person he loves. He thinks, We are together, but with no obligations—we won’t get married or enter into a bourgeois lifestyle. I love you deeply, and whenever we meet we will be together, because it is wonderful to have a relationship with someone who is my accomplice, and someone who feels no sense of obligation towards me. So that is his attitude, and if women sustain him and love him, why is that? Because he is not obliging them to do anything—he’s leaving the next day, or will be arriving the day after. He is their friend, their accomplice. There is a basic friendship in love that I do believe exists.”

AlvaroMutis

On Monarchy and Democracy

Monarchy is a thing of the past, and a government with divine right and absolute power like that of Louis XIV or Charlemagne is the last thing I would want. In this day and age, something like that is impossible. The kind of monarchy that I am dreaming of does not exist. I agree with Borges when he said that democracy is “a deception of statistics,” I think that it is something that does not work, and we see it failing all the time. Something that we must keep in mind is that one of the most sinister characters, the most sick and diabolical murderers, Adolf Hitler, was voted chancellor of the German Reich by a majority. So, I say, like Ortega y Gassett, that when a lot of people agree about something, it’s either a stupid idea or a beautiful woman. Dictatorships, which I detest, especially these military dictatorships in Latin America, have had enormous popular support. I saw the Plaza de Mayo full of people yelling “Perón! Perón!” and it filled me with disgust, but that’s how it was. So, one must be careful with the application of the formula. But I don’t mean to frighten anyone. As I don’t follow politics, I have never voted, and the most recent political event that really preoccupies me and which I am still struggling to accept is the fall of Byzantium at the hand of the Turks in 1453.”

The absolute density of human relations

“I worked like everyone else. In those days, the jail was managed by the prisoners, who were divided into wards. I was the head of a ward, which was a huge responsibility—but not a privilege. There is one thing that I learned in prison, that I passed on to Maqroll, and that is that you don’t judge others, you don’t say, “That guy committed a terrible crime against his family, so I can’t be his friend.” In a place like that one coexists because the judging is done on the outside. This is vital, because in there, the density of human relations is absolute.”



Restaurant zur Esche, Waldhotel Ehrenbach, Black Forest, Germany

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Black Forest, Germany

Black Forest, Germany

This review is long overdue.

But better late than never.

During an Autumn visit to the Black Forest in Germany three years ago, I stayed and dined at the Waldhotel Ehrenbach, in the locality of Hinterzarten.

Kalbs Krauterbratwurst - Veal bratwurst with herbs

Kalbs Krauterbratwurst – Veal bratwurst with herbs

I took the set menu of the evening and did not regret it. The first dish was Veal Bratwurst with Herbs, on a bed of lentils with sage and apple sauce.

I love lentils, and the combination with the sausage and the apple was great. It worked!

Kurbisrisotto mit Estragon - Pumpkin Risotto with Estragon

Kurbisrisotto mit Estragon – Pumpkin Risotto with Estragon

When the pupkin is in season, it just tastes great. The Pumpkin Risotto with Estragon was delicious!

Venison cooked in Hay

Venison cooked in Hay

What followed was a masterpiece of mild temperature cooking. Hay protects venison’s meat from excessive heat and keeps it moist and tender.

Venison cooked in Hay, with Garden Vegetables and Bread Dumplings: delicious!

A selection of cheeses with dried fruits salad

A selection of cheeses with dried fruits salad

A selection of Cheeses from the High Black Forest with a Salad of Dried Fruits ended the delicious meal.

Waldhotel, Ehrenbach

Waldhotel, Ehrenbach


Greece’s Golden Dawn: Better late than never?

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Cy Twombly: Untitled

Cy Twombly: Untitled

In February 27th 2013, in a post on Golden Dawn’s proselytizing children, I wrote:

“Why New Democracy, PASOK, Democratic Left and SYRIZA do not ask the institutional court of the country to outlaw Golden Dawn?”

Today the leader of Golden Dawn and some of his deputies have been arrested by the authorities in Greece and face charges for setting up and operating a criminal organization.

The most recent sad predecessor to today’s events is the cold blood murder of a leftist artist in a working class suburb of Piraeus, near Athens in Greece.

He was stabbed to death by a Golden Dawn operative.

Today’s events are a major change for the Prime Minister, Antonis Samaras, leader of the New Democracy Party, the major member of the right-center coalition governing Greece.

But it is just a step, albeit a major one.

Jean Michel Basquiat, Untitled

Jean Michel Basquiat, Untitled

A lot of questions require answers.

Who was financing the operation of the Golden Dawn?

What were the links of the organization to the Police and the Army?

Why did the ruling New Democracy Party block all attempts of the other parties to stop Golden Dawn’s activities until now?


Ristorante Al Covo, Venice, Italy

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The “Ristorante Al Covo” is in Castello, near the Hotel Gabrielli, no more than 15 minutes walk from St. Mark’s Square.

This review is long overdue, as I had it prepared and filed as a draft, only to forget it.

Now that I recovered it from the archive, I want to share it, if only for the reason that it is an excellent choice to dine in Venice.

Ristorante Al Covo

My first dish was “Scampi Crudi – Raw crayfish”.

It was served as it came out of the water, without the shell, with shredded cucumber, lemon dill, olive oil.

Scampi Crudi – Raw crayfish – Ristorante Al Covo

…and a big big leaf of basil!

Scampi crudi – Raw crayfish – Ristorante Al Covo

My second dish was Baccala Batagin, a dish made with salted cod (baccala) cooked in the oven with sliced potatoes, prunes and rosemary. After being cooked, a s plash of tomato sauce is put on top and a dash of olive oil.

Baccala “Batagin”, Ristorante Al Covo
 
In addition, I spotted pistacchio nuts sprinkled over the tomato sauce, and lemon dill.
The atmosphere of the restaurant is wonderful, because the clientele are mostly Venetians who enjoy good food.
Overall, a highly satisfactory experience, which I hope I will have sometime again!
Baccala “Batagin” detail – Ristorante Al Covo
 
 

Restaurant “Thalassa mou”, Alyki, Paros, Greece

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During a short visit to Paros, I visited a restaurant for the first time.

It is a restaurant by the breaking wave on the edge of Aiyki, in the southwestern corner of the island.

By the breaking wave

By the breaking wave

The restaurant opened last year and operates during the – unfortunately short – tourist season of Paros, from late May to late September.

It is owned and operated by a couple.

The husband is a chef trained in France, and the wife runs the front of the house.

Appetizers presented as tapas

Appetizers presented as tapas

The menu is local food, prepared and presented in a beautiful and “modern” way.

It not only tastes good, it looks good as well!

Tuna carpaccio with avocado

Tuna carpaccio with avocado

They have a seven small dishes appetizer plate that is a must. Eggplant salad, marinated anchovies, chick peas, octopus in wine, fava bean salad, taramossalata (egg roe dip) and a delicious cold tomato soup.

The highlight of the appetizers is a small tuna carpaccio with avocado and mint.

Cheese fritters

Cheese fritters

The cheese fritters are made with local fresh cheese and are delicious!

Rabbit with lardon, and mushrooms, served with tagliatelle

Rabbit with lardons, and mushrooms, served with tagliatelle

I was curious how rabbit would taste in a hot day, and was justified in taking the dish. Absolutely delicious, juicy and gamey local rabbit, in a light sauce with lardons to die for, parmesan cheese and tagliatelle al dente.

One thing is for sure. I will visit them again!

mmm


Ephemeron, ephemeral, ephemerality

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London's Millennium Bridge

London’s Millennium Bridge

“Ephemeron” refers to an object of a transitory or impermanent nature.

Photo shoot on London's Millennium Bridge

Photo shoot on London’s Millennium Bridge

“Ephemeral”: beginning and ending in a day.

Photo shoot on London's Millennium Bridge

Photo shoot on London’s Millennium Bridge

“Ephemerality”: the state and /or condition of being ephemeral.

Photo shoot on London's Millennium Bridge

Photo shoot on London’s Millennium Bridge

Manifold: ephemerality, changeability, and transitoriness.

Photo shoot on London's Millennium Bridge

Photo shoot on London’s Millennium Bridge

Ephemeral objects.

London's Millennium Bridge

London’s Millennium Bridge

The transition from something to something else; from something else to nothing.


Captain John Saris: the Man who brought Shunga to England

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1707 Map of Japan

1707 Map of Japan

Introduction

Today I want to tell a story. About a captain named John Saris, who in 1613 brought back to England some “pictures” from his travels in Japan. But they were not pictures that English or European people would consider ordinary. They were “Shunga” pictures.  It so happened that it was not only Captain Saris’s compatriots who were shocked when they saw these pictures. The following incident is characteristic:

“Francis Hall, one of the first US businessmen to visit Japan after the reopening of the country in 1859, was amazed when the respectable married couple who had entertained him to dinner in their home proudly showed him some treasured examples (of Shunga), husband and wife together.” (1)

Torii Kiyonaga, detail taken from Sode no maki (Handscroll for the Sleeve, c.1785

Torii Kiyonaga, detail taken from Sode no maki (Handscroll for the Sleeve, c.1785

But what is Shunga?

“Shunga, literally ‘spring pictures’, is the name given to the major genre of explicit erotic art created in Japan during the early modern period (my note “the Edo period”), c.1600–1900. At its best, shunga celebrates the pleasures of lovemaking, in beautiful pictures that present mutual attraction and sexual desire as natural and unaffected. Generally the couples shown are male-female, sometimes married, sometimes not. It is not unusual – particularly in the earlier part of the period – also to find male-male couples, according to accepted custom whereby a mature man courted a youth. The genre’s artistic conventions include facial expressions conveying a sense of deep pleasure, exaggerated sexual organs that are the source of that pleasure and surroundings filled with gorgeous textiles, accessories, food and drink. Often the pictures will contain snippets of humorous and even farcical conversation between the lovers. Another common name for a spring picture was ‘laughter picture’ (warai-e).” (1)

Tokugawa Ieyasu, first shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate

Tokugawa Ieyasu, first shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate

The Edo period  

The Edo period  is the period between 1603 and 1867 in the history of Japan, when the country was under the rule of the Tokugawa Shogunate.

“Men and women during the Edo period really enjoyed life and this is reflected through shunga,” says Sotheby’s Hong Kong Gallery director Angelika Li. “Look at the facial expressions and the interactions depicted, they are enjoying what they are doing, it’s not perverse, it’s relaxed, it’s saying that sex is just a part of life to be enjoyed.” (2)

There was no strong sense in Edo Japan of sex as ‘sinful’, certainly not according to the native beliefs we now call Shintō, which traced the mythical origins of the Japanese islands and the imperial lineage to the conjugation between the deities Izanagi and Izanami, who learned the techniques of lovemaking by watching the twitching tail of a wagtail. (1)

Emperor Meiji

Emperor Meiji

The Meiji period

The Edo period is followed by the Meiji period, which starts on 3rd May 1868. Meiji is the restoration of the imperial rule in Japan, under Emperor Meiji. It was a response to the perceived threat by the colonial powers of the day. Japan was weak militarily and centuries of isolation had kept the country underdeveloped in armaments and industry.

“By the Meiji period, the influence of Western values had transformed shunga into a thing of taboo, and contemporary Japanese society continues to struggle with prejudices against shunga.” (2)

Kitagawa Utamaro: A scene from the poem of the pillow

Kitagawa Utamaro: A scene from the poem of the pillow

East India Company

The East India Company (EIC) was incorporated by royal charter in 1600. The charter granted a monopoly of all English trade in all lands washed by the Indian Ocean (from the southern tip of Africa, to Indonesia in the South Pacific). Unauthorized (British) interlopers were liable to forfeiture of ships and cargo. The company was managed by a governor and 24 directors chosen from its stockholders.

Sir Thomas Smythe

Sir Thomas Smythe

The Clove

It was 11th June 1613 when Clove, a British ship, sailed into Hirado, a port on the westernmost tip of the island of Kyushu.

It was the first British ship to arrive in Japan.

The Commander of the voyage, John Saris, was warmly welcomed by the local ruling family, the Matsuura, and the lord himself went aboard the Clove to view it.

Clove set out of England in the Spring of 1611, leading a mission of three ships. The trip was organised by the East India Company, then headed by Sir Thomas Smythe (c.1588-1625). (3)

Ravaged by scurvy, ­dysentery and hungry cannibals encountered during their   traumatic two-year journey, the surviving crew of the East India Company’s   galleon, the Clove, staggered ashore at Hirado, Japan’s westernmost port, in  June 1613.

Clove was met by William Adams, or “Anjin Miura” (the Pilot from Miura), an Englishman who had arrived 13   years earlier as the pilot of a Dutch ship, understood the language and had   risen to honorary samurai status.

Katsushika Hokusai - Diving Girl with Octopus

Katsushika Hokusai – Diving Girl with Octopus

What happened in Japan?

Saris and Adams took a month to reach Shizuoka, entering the city along a road   lined with severed heads on pikes. The journey gave Saris time to observe   the Japanese: he liked their “cheese” (in fact, tofu) and the women were    “well faced, handed and footed”, although he was somewhat put off by their   practice of dyeing their teeth black. The journey also gave the two men time   to get to know each other. The crew of the Clove had expected an effusive   welcome from a compatriot marooned for 13 years, but were offended by   Adams’s coolness towards them. Saris distrusted him as “a naturalised   Japaner”. The historian James Murdoch likely echoes Adams’s view of Saris as    “a mere dollar-grinding philistine with a taste for pornographic pictures”. (5)

Shogun Ieyasu granted trading rights to Captain John Saris, who established the first English trading post in Japan. In this capacity he was able to acquire many goods, including the “shunga” pictures he brought back to England with him.

saris_supp_1941_cvr-1

The return to England

Saris took the Clove out from Japan in late 1613 with many Japanese artefacts, in addition to the presents, such as lacquer, screens and (not for sale, but for Saris’s own amusement) erotic images, called shunga.

The Clove arrived home in Plymouth in September, and in London in December, 1614. The lacquer was sold at auction and is the first art auction ever held in English history. The screens were auctioned second.

Things, however, for the Captain were not good. After his return to England Saris was charged with cruelty towards his men and with smuggling.

The shunga was confiscated by the East India Company and destroyed, being considered scandalous.

Though officially reprimanded, he was also awarded a ‘gratification’ for his achievements of over £300.

Now rich, he left the Company and some time later married Anne, granddaughter of a former Lord Mayor of London. When she died childless after a couple of years, Saris moved to comfortable retirement in Fulham, a fashionable suburb in 1629. He took a house on Church Gate, behind All Saints Church. Saris died on 11th December 1643, leaving much of his money to charity. His grave is modest and sadly has been damaged and removed from its original site. (4)

Large Perspective Picture of a Second-Floor Parlor in the New Yoshiwara, "Looking Toward the Embankment” (1745), a hand-colored woodcut by Okumura Masanobu

Large Perspective Picture of a Second-Floor Parlor in the New Yoshiwara, “Looking Toward the Embankment” (1745), a hand-colored woodcut by Okumura Masanobu

Shunga: sex and pleasure in Japanese art, An Exhibition at the British Museum

Among the trade goods Saris brought back to London and displayed at the Royal Exchange, were ‘lascivious’ pictures, now presumed to have been Japanese shunga. These were promptly burned by outraged Company officials. Destroyed in 1615, locked away in 1865, shunga was finally publicly displayed for the first time in London in 1973 as part of a general exhibition of ukiyo-e prints organised by the Victoria & Albert Museum. In 1995, the British Museum included all the major shunga works by Utamaro in its special monograph exhibition of that artist.

Shunga: sex and pleasure in Japanese art is the first comprehensive exhibition to focus in detail on the beauty and humour of shunga, setting this fascinating art form in its historical and cultural context. (1)

Sources

1. British Museum Magazine – Timothy Clark, curator of Shunga: sex and pleasure in Japanese art talks about the exhibition

2. INTERVIEW: Uragami Mitsuru on Japanese Erotic Art, Shunga

3. The Voyage of ‘The Clove’ – Japan 400 Years Ago, Eccentric Parabola

4. Historical Overview  - 400 years of Japan – British relations

5.The Daily Telegraph:  Japan: 400 years in a fascinating land. Michael Booth retraces the footsteps of the first English samurai.


The diasappearance of the body from the work of Sarah Lucas

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I recently visited a gallery in London, where works by Sarah Lucas are exhibited.

Sarah Lucas, Au naturel, 2008

Sarah Lucas, Au naturel, 2008

I have written about Sarah Lucas before, namely about her powerful metaphors of food, linking eggs, chickens, burgers to genitalia and body parts, recognizable or not.

Sarah Lucas, Penetralia, 2008

Sarah Lucas, Penetralia, 2008

What impressed me the most in the Sarah Lucas exhibition, is the disappearance of the body. Most of her recent works are about genitalia and body parts, twisted, deformed, or otherwise. But the body has disappeared, except in one of the exhibit rooms, where she presented some wall-size photographs of the lower half of male bodies ornated with artifacts.

Jake and Dinos Chapman, Fuckface

Jake and Dinos Chapman, Fuckface

This is quite interesting if you contrast it with the work of JAke and Dinos Chapman.  In @Fuckface@ we have not only a body, albeit a conflated one, but also faces. A merging of genitalia and the human face, accompanied by a rather sad rendition of the rest of the body. But in spite of its sorry state, the body is present.

Sarah Lucas, Nud Cycladic 10

Sarah Lucas, Nud Cycladic 10, 2010

This is not the case with Sarah Lucas. But it does not stop there. Her “Nud Cycladic” Series introduces renditions of body parts that cannot be called recognizable. They may trigger associational processes and as a result various other images, but immediately recognizable they are not.

Sarah Lucas, Pauline Bunny, 1997

Sarah Lucas, Pauline Bunny, 1997

I left the exhibition rather dazed and disoriented. I do not usually get exposed to this bombardment of genitalia and body parts floating about, or standing on their own on the floor, or hanging from the walls or the ceiling. My rescus came from the “Pauline Bunny”, Lucas’ of 1997. I recovered it from my archives and felt that I came back to some sense of regularity. What previously looked like a monster, became like a friend I had not seen for a long time.

Sarah Lucas in her studio

Sarah Lucas in her studio

Could it be that the body has not disappeared but is disappearing? And will eventually come back?



John Stuart Mill’s Tendency Laws: are they contradictory to his determinism?

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Introduction
By reconstructing Mill’s argument, I will show that there is no contradiction between Mill’s determinism and his views on tendency laws. Mill was consistent in his approach. In the context of his deterministic method, he provided adequate explanation of why we should be viewing the phenomena of the world as tendencies, both in the physical and the (mental or moral) social sciences, without negating causality. However, at the same time, Mill outlines the limitations of causality and its laws.
This essay has two parts. In the first part I consider Mill’s tendency laws in the natural sciences, while in the second part I focus on tendency laws in the social sciences.
I have sourced Mill’s original material from ‘System of Logic’ (SOL) and ‘On the Definition of Political Economy and on the Method of Investigation proper to it’ (DPE). Both are included in Nagel (1). In the text I use ‘social science’ to denote Mill’s ‘mental or moral science’, or ‘political economy’.
Part I: The physical sciences
Mill’s determinism is based on ‘the various uniformities of the course of nature, which when ascertained by what is regarded as a sufficient induction, we call he laws of nature’ (SOL, Book III, Chapter IV, § 1; 1, 187). The law of causation dictates that every fact which has a beginning has a cause. He proceeds to define ‘the cause of a phenomenon to be the antecedent, or the concurrence of antecedents, on which it (the phenomenon) is invariably and unconditionally consequent’. (SOL, Book III, Chapter V, § 3; 1, 197-198). The repeating, invariable and unconditional consequence of the phenomenon enables us to generalize, inferring its cause.
A phenomenon will occur again and again, as long as the phenomena comprising its cause occur again, and provided that ‘no other phenomenon having the character of a counteracting cause shall exist’. (SOL, Book III, Chapter V, § 5; 1, 203).
The concept of a counteracting cause is opening the door to tendency laws. It so happens that in some cases: ‘There are often several independent modes in which the same phenomenon could have originated… Many causes may produce mechanical motion; many causes may produce some kinds of sensation; many causes may produce death’. (SOL, Book III, Chapter X, § 1; 1, 239).
Given the multitude of causes in some phenomena, it is possible that diverse causes act simultaneously, in composition; in such case ‘two or more laws interfere with one another and apparently frustrate or modify one another’s operation, yet in reality all are fulfilled’. (SOL, Book III, Chapter X, 4; 1, 246).
Therefore, when a phenomenon may be explained by a multitude of causes and opposing causes occur simultaneously, we cannot be certain about the outcome. This does not mean that the laws are not valid. They are fulfilled, but the outcome of the acting of opposing causes may produce different outcomes. For this reason: ‘All laws of causation, in consequence of their liability to be counteracted, require to be stated in words affirmative of tendencies only, and not of actual results.’ (SOL, Book III, Chapter X, 4; 1, 248).
Part II: The social sciences
In the social sciences we have to cope with two major issues: great complexity and our ignorance, to degrees that are by far higher than in the physical sciences. ‘We study nature… in circumstances… of great complexity and never perfectly known to us, and with the far greater part of the processes concealed from our observation.’ (DPE; 1, p.427).
Causes will operate in a certain manner unless they are counteracted. ‘We may be able to conclude, from the laws of human nature applied to the circumstances of a given state of society, that a particular cause will operate in a certain manner unless counteracted; but we can never be assured to what extent or amount it will so operate, or affirm with certainty that it will not be counteracted; because we can seldom know even approximately, all the agencies which may co-exist with it, and still less calculate the collective result of so many combined elements’. (SOL Book VI, Chapter IX, § 2; 1, 334).
It is impossible to be ‘quite sure that all circumstances of the particular case are known to us sufficiently in detail and that our attention is not unduly diverted from any of them.’ The unknown circumstances, the ones that ‘have not fallen under the cognizance of science, have been called “disturbing causes”’. (DPE; 1, p.429).
We can never be assured to what extent or amount the disturbing causes will operate, or affirm with certainty that a particular cause will not be counteracted. ‘We may be able to conclude, from the laws of human nature applied to the circumstances of a given state of society, that a particular cause will operate in a certain manner unless counteracted; but we can never be assured to what extent or amount it will so operate, or affirm with certainty that it will not be counteracted; because we can seldom know even approximately, all the agencies which may co-exist with it, and still less calculate the collective result of so many combined elements.’ (SOL, Book VI, Chapter IX, § 2; 1, 334).
Having established the existence of disturbing causes, Mill proceeds to preserve the integrity of causality, by claiming that: ‘The disturbing causes have their laws, as the causes which are thereby disturbed have theirs; and from the laws of the disturbing causes, the nature and amount of the disturbance may be predicted “a priori”, like the operation of the more general laws which they are said to modify or disturb, but with which they might more properly be said to be concurrent. The effect of the special causes is then to be added to, or subtracted from, the effect of the general ones.’ (DPE; 1, p.430).
As the last sentence reminds us, what makes all of this line of argumentation valid is the compounding of causes. ‘When an effect depends upon a concurrence of causes, those causes must be studied one at a time, and their laws separately investigated, if we wish, through the causes, to obtain the power of either predicting or controlling the effect; since the law of the effect is compounded of the laws of all the causes which determine it.’ (DPE; 1, p.421).
We have now arrived at the conclusion of the argument. ‘It is evident that the social sciences considered as a system of deductions a priori, cannot be a science of positive predictions, but only of tendencies’. (SOL, Book VI, Chapter IX, § 2; 1, 334). This is the same conclusion Mill arrived at when considering causality in the physical sciences. One might say though, that the tendencies are more evident in the social compared to the physical sciences, due to the higher complexity of the phenomena and our ignorance.
Mill closes the “loop” of the scientific process with verification using the “a posteriori” method. The “a priori” method of investigation is supplemented by the “a posteriori” method as a means of verifying truth and ‘reducing to the lowest point that uncertainty before alluded to as arising from the complexity of every particular case, and from the difficulty (not to say impossibility) of our being assured “a priori” that we have taken into account all the material circumstances.’ (DPE; 1, p.431).
Social phenomena are complex, and there are potentially many disturbing causes, most of which, if not all, we do not know of. Therefore the relevant laws governing the phenomena can only be stated as tendency laws which we verify using the “a posteriori” method. The verification process may give us knowledge about some of the disturbing causes and their laws.
Epilogue
Having shown that Mill was consistent in his approach, I want to conclude by briefly considering the legacy of “tendency laws”.
‘When things are not ceteris paribus, the laws in question still apply. But they now describe tendencies – partial elements of a complex situation. (Therefore) ceteris paribus laws and tendencies go hand in hand – and that seems reasonable enough’ (2). Kincaid’s statement practically attributes the “ceteris paribus” approach to Mill. And many economists and philosophers agree with him. Given the importance of ceteris paribus laws in economics, we can conclude that Mill’s “tendency laws” have played a very important role in the shaping and the development of economics.
However, the limits to our knowledge and understanding of complex phenomena must not be underestimated. As Hayek argues: ‘…we can reasonably claim that a certain phenomenon is determined by known natural forces and at the same time admit that we do not know precisely how it has been produced… It would then appear that the search for the discovery of laws is not an appropriate hallmark of scientific procedure but merely a characteristic of the theories of simple phenomena as we have defined these earlier; and that in the field of complex phenomena the term ‘law’ as well as the concepts of cause and effect are not applicable without such modification as to deprive them of their ordinary meaning.’ (3)
When it comes to complex social phenomena, “tendency laws” may in addition to providing some explanations, reveal the limits of causal determinism, and enhance “our knowledge of our ignorance” (4, quoted by Hayek in 3).
References
1. Nagel, Ernest. John Stuart Mill’s Philosophy of Scientific Method. Hafner Publishing Company. New York, 1950.
2. Kincaid, Harold. Defending Laws in the Social Sciences, in: Martin, Michael and McIntyre, Lee (eds.) Readings in the Philosophy of Social Sciences. MIT Press, 1994.
3. Hayek, F.A. The Theory of Complex Phenomena, in: Martin, Michael and McIntyre, Lee (eds.) Readings in the Philosophy of Social Sciences. MIT Press, 1994.
4. Popper, K. R. “On the Sources of Knowledge and Ignorance”, Proceedings of the British Academy. 46, 1960.

 


Crispy Stuffed Zucchini Flowers

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With considerable delay, I publish today one of the absolute delicacies: crispy stuffed zucchini flowers.

Zucchini flowers to die for!

Zucchini flowers to die for!

It is November, Christmas is coming, and I dream of the Summer and its delicacies!

The whole secret is to have the super freshest of zucchini, cut from the vegetable garden a split second ago!

Time is important, in case you have not noticed, not only in what we do, but also in how we prepare our food. 

Mizythra with coriander and mint

Myzithra with coriander and mint

I stuff the flowers with a soft white cheese mix. I use myzithra from Crete, add salt and pepper and some chopped coriander and mint.

Fresh ricotta would also have been perfect for the dish.

Dusted with flour

Dusted with flour

After stuffing the flowers I dip them in water and dust them with flour before dipping into the batter mix.

Bubbly batter does it!

Bubbly batter does it!

The batter has to be full of bubbles! A bubbly batter does it! Stir vigorously until you have the bubbles that will give lightness to the batter.

Crispy stuffed zucchini flowers served

Crispy stuffed zucchini flowers served

Served and ready to be enjoyed!

Crispy stuffed zucchini flower sliced and ready to be enjoyed - please use your hands!!!

Crispy stuffed zucchini flower sliced and ready to be enjoyed – please use your hands!!!

I slice them in two halves with a knife, and subsequently eat them with my hands. Totally different sensation.

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I do not know about you, but I am good for a little more!


Aphrodite (Venus), Pan and Eros: A sculpture in the National Archaelogical Museum of Athens

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A sculpture of Aphrodite, Pan and Eros, exhibited in the National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, in Greece, is the subject of this post.

The sculpture was made at about 100 BC of Parian marble, and was found on the island of Delos, in the House of the Poseidoniasts of Beirut. On the low base of the group an inscription is carved: ‘Dionysos, son of Zenon who was son Theodoros, from Beirut dedicated [this offering] to the ancestral gods for his own benefit and that of his children’.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble  100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble 100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

A few introductory words about who is who are in order.

Aphrodite (Venus for the Romans) is the goddess of love and beauty. A victim of her own success and beauty, Aphrodite has never lost her sense of earthy pleasure.

Eros (Cupid for the Romans) is the god of love, son of Aphrodite. Somethies he is innocent, with rosy cheeks and beautiful smile, other times he is totally vicious, tormenting humans with his arrows.

Pan is the god of the Wild, half goat half man, and a very very notty old fart!

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble  100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble 100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

What is the story in the sculpture?

Aphrodite, is stark naked. She appears to be trying to fend off an overwhelming expression of affinity by Pan.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble  100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble 100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

Her right hand is slightly raised and holds a sandal.

Is she ready to strike Pan?

It appears to be so.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble  100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble 100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

But it isn’t.

For one, a closer look at ther muscles will show us that is very relaxed.

For another, her face is almost smiling. A veiled smile emerges. And the angle of her head is such that she is not directly looking at Pan.

The last unmistakable signal that Aphrodite sends to the observer of the scene is the position of her left hand. A woman under attack would almost by instinct try to cover her most exposed nudity, touching the puberty area using her palm. But Aphrodite is not doing that. Her palm is relaxed and at some distance from her flesh.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble  100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble 100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

Pan is in a hopeless state. He cannot help himself and is totally at a loss.

He is trying to embrace Aphrodite in the most awkward of ways. Look at his right hand, how high it is in Aphrodite’s back. Not exactly a gesture of aggression. More a gesture of creeping affinity.

It is like he is lusting for her but at the same time he is shying away from expressing his lust.

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Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble 100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

Eros (I would have preferred to call him “Putto” like the Italians do, but being Greek I have to stick to my mother tongue) is a little devil in the middle of the two protagonists of this subdued ensemble action. His apparently tries to separate them, in a sense protecting Aphrodite.

But is he?

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble 100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble 100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

His smiling face, his posture (look at the angle of the head) is more like saying “I want to be part of this”.

His bodily posture is a posture of palying. He pushes Pan’s right horn ever so gently, more touching than pushing, smiling all the time.

And the old boy returns the smile.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble 100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

Aphrodite, Pan and Eros; Parian marble 100 BC. National Archaelogical Museum of Athens, Greece.

As a final observation before my conclusion, I offer the angle of Aphrodite’s left ankle. How gentle and relaxed and playful! Restrained and at the same time powerful, but not aggressive!

And this brings me to the supreme feature of the sculpture. Its ambivalence.

All three protagonists are doing something and at the same time they are not.

And in the process, being totally submerged into this ambivalence, they have a hell of a good time!

Ancient Greece at her best!


Lord Byron’s “Giaour – A Fragment of a Turkish Tale”

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Introduction

“Greece was the mostly sought Eastern country by travelers during the 19th century.” (1)

Lord Byron visited Greece for the first time in his 1809-1810 travels to the South of Europe.

While in Greece, he heard a story about a woman who experienced terrible death by been thrown into the sea alive inside a bag.

This story gave Lord Byron the material for his poem “The Giaour”.

The “Giaour” is Byron’s only narrative poem, and the first of four Turkish tales that he wrote.

It is also a poem that in a way contributed the birth of the “vampire”, albeit a vampire different from the one we are accustomed in the 21st century.

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George Gordon Noel, sixth Baron Byron

George Gordon Noel, sixth Baron Byron, was born on 22 January 1788 in London.

In July 1823, Byron left Italy to join the Greek insurgents who were fighting a war of independence against the Ottoman Empire.

On 19 April 1824 he died from fever at Messolonghi, in modern day Greece.

His death was mourned throughout Britain. His body was brought back to England and buried at his ancestral home in Nottinghamshire.

Byron had enormous influence on the romantic movement and European poetry. One of the poets greatly influenced by Byron was Goethe.

He is also the only English  poet Bertrand Russell included in his History of Western Philosophy.

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Orientalism

“Romantic Orientalism, then, became part of the larger movement of British Romanticism, which was further enthused by Napoleon‟s invasion of Egypt (1798–1799) and Greece‟s War of Independence (1821–1828). To Romantic travelers, scholars, artists and men of letters the Orient constituted a distant world which conveniently suited their search for the exotic and sublime experiences.” (1)

In his book “Orientalism”, Edward Said observes: “Popular Orientalism during the late eighteenth century and the early nineteenth attained a vogue of considerable intensity”

Apparently Byron was not driven to orientalism by accident. In “Interrogating Orientalism”, the editors observe (3):

In late August 1813, Byron had advised his friend Tom Moore to read Antoine Laurent Castellan’s Moeurs, usages, costumes des Othomans (1812) for poetic materials:

“Stick to the East; the oracle, Stael, told me it was the only poetic policy. The North, South, and West, have all been exhausted; but from the East, we have nothing but Southey’s unsaleables. . . . The little I have done in that way is merely a “voice in the wilderness” for you; and, if it has had any success, that also will prove that the public are orientalizing, and pave the path for you. (Letters and Journals 3:101)”

adding that “the public are orientalizing.”

Following his own advice, he dashed off and published three more “Turkish tales” before the next year was out — The Bride of Abydos (published in December 1813 and reissued in ten further editions of 1814  and 1815), The Corsair (published in February 1814 — selling ten thousand copies on the first day — and reissued in eight or more editions through 1815), and Lara (published in August 1814, with five or six subsequent editions in the next couple of years). (6)

Eugene Delacroix: Combat of the Giaour and the Pasha

Eugene Delacroix: Combat of the Giaour and the Pasha, 1827, The Art Institute of Chicago

The Giaour

The word “giaour” means foreigner or infidel, and in this Moslem context Byron’s hero is a Christian outsider, in a situation enabling contrasts of ideas about love, sex, death, and the hereafter.

The Giaour was started in London between September 1812 and March 1813, first published by John Murray in late March 1813, and finally completed December 1813, after having, in Byron’s words, “lengthened its rattles” (BLJ III 100) from 407 lines in the first draft to 1334 lines in the twelfth edition. (4)

According to one of Byron’s letters, the story in the poem was a tale he’d overheard “by accident recited by one of the coffee-house story tellers who abound in the Levant,” and he blamed the fragmented style on a “failure of memory,”

The narrative is built around a doomed love triangle, composed of the Giaour, a nameless Christian, Hassan and one of his wives, Leila. Leila « breaks her bower, » goes out into the world of men and taking the Giaour as a lover, lashes out against the values that structure her society. Hassan attemps to reestablish the balance by confining her to a space even smaller than the harem : a canvas bag which is then summarily thrown over the side of a boat unbeknownst to its crew and the reader, to whom this episode is recounted through the eyes of a fisherman. The Giaour takes his revenge, ambushing Hassan in a mountain pass, then, crushed by his part in Leila’s death, spends the rest of his days spurning the solace offered him by a man of the cloth, representative of orthodoxy. (7)

Leila

The heroine of the poem, Leila is a silent and passive heroine.

Another Leila in Byron’s Don Juan has a similar profile (8)

Delacroix (5)

Following a visit to England in 1825, Eugène Delacroix, the leading Romantic painter in France, based this painting on the poem The Giaour (pronounced jor) written by English poet Lord Byron in 1813. The subject—passions avenged on the faraway Greek battlefield—is perfectly suited to the Romantic vision of exotic locales and unleashed emotion.

In the painting, a Venetian (my note: according to others, Giaour was a Christian without more specifics, but it does not really matter, does it?) known as the Giaour—a Turkish term for infidel—fights the Muslim Hassan to avenge the death of his lover, who was killed by Hassan after fleeing his harem. The stark setting and aggressive movements place the focus of the painting on these two main characters. Weapons poised, the enemies face off in mirrored poses: the Giaour in swirling white with bloodshot eyes, Hassan facing his opponent with his weapon raised. The dynamic motion and emotion of the composition, which looks back to the Baroque style of Peter Paul Rubens, is further heightened by the artist’s use of high-keyed colors and bold and loose brushwork. Delacroix’s handling of pigments was influenced by a mid-19th-century color theory that stated that a spot of color will appear to be surrounded by a faint ring of its complement. In Delacroix’s painting, the adaptation of this effect is seen in the artist’s use of complementary colors, rather than the addition of black pigment, to create shadows.

The Combat of the Giaour and Hassan was included in an exhibition at the Parisian Galerie Lebrun to benefit the Greeks and their war of liberation from the Ottoman Turks (1821–1832). This political cause inspired numerous Romantic artists, writers, and musicians, and was the subject of one of Delacroix’s best-known paintings, The Massacre at Chios. The latter painting was based on an actual incident in the Greek wars of independence, unlike the Art Institute’s painting, which is derived from a work of fiction. Both are examples of Orientalism in Romantic painting, in which depictions of the Middle East and North Africa emphasize the exotic appeal of the lands and their people.

Gericault: Portrait of Lord Byron

Gericault: Portrait of Lord Byron

Vampires

As an article in BBC informs us,

“Byron was one of the first authors to write about vampires and his image even inspired the look of the monsters.” (2) The following is an extensive quote from the article:

Dr Matt Green is a lecturer at the University of Nottingham. The Gothic expert said: “The vampire first comes into English literature around the end of the eighteenth century.

“One of the first poems the vampire features in is by Lord Byron. It’s a poem called The Giaour (a Turkish word for an infidel or nonbeliever).

“At one point the giaour is cursed by his enemy to become a vampire and to prey and feed on his descendents.”

The poem goes: “Bur first, on earth as Vampire sent, Thy corse shall from its tomb be rent: Then ghastly haunt thy native place, And suck the blood of all thy race.”

“At this stage the vampire in Byron’s poem and in English literature is more a zombie figure. He comes out of the ground and he eats those around him and then goes back into the ground. He can’t wander far from his place of birth and his family.”

That perception was about to change and Byron would be central to it.

The university lecturer said: “It’s not until a couple of years later that the vampire becomes this cosmopolitan, seductive figure. That has to do with Byron as well.”

Eugene Delacroix, Combat Between Giaour and Pasha, 1827, Art Institute of Chicago

Eugene Delacroix, Combat Between Giaour and Pasha, 1827, The Art Institute of Chicago

Excerpts of the poem

The maid for whom his melody,
His thousand songs are heard on high,
Blooms blushing to her lover’s tale:
His queen, the garden queen, his Rose,
Unbent by winds, unchilled by snows,
Far from winters of the west,
By every breeze and season blest,
Returns the sweets by Nature given
In soft incense back to Heaven;
And gratefu yields that smiling sky
Her fairest hue and fragrant sigh.

DelacroixCombatGiaourEtPacha

Eugene Delacroix, The combat of the Giaour with the Pasha, 1835, Petit Palais, Paris, France

The foam that streaks the courser’s side
Seems gathered from the ocean-tide:
Though weary waves are sunk to rest,
There’s none within his rider’s breast;
And though tomorrow’s tempest lower,
‘Tis calmer than thy heart, young Giaour!
I know thee not, I loathe thy race,
But in thy lineaments I trace
What time shall strengthen, not efface:
Though young and pale, that sallow front
Is scathed by fiery passion’s brunt;
Though bent on earth thine evil eye,
As meteor-like thou glidest by,
Right well I view thee and deem thee one
Whom Othman’s sons should slay or shun.

Eugene Delacroix, The Giaour over the dead Pasha

Eugene Delacroix, The Giaour over the dead Pasha

Not thus was Hassan wont to fly
When Leila dwelt in his Serai.
Doth Leila there no longer dwell?
That tale can only Hassan tell:
Strange rumours in our city say
Upon that eve she fled away
When Rhamazan’s last sun was set,
And flashing from each minaret
Millions of lamps proclaimed the feast
Of Bairam through the boundless East.
‘Twas then she went as to the bath,
Which Hassan vainly searched in wrath;
For she was flown her master’s rage
In likeness of a Georgian page,
And far beyond the Moslem’s power
Had wronged him with the faithless Giaour.
Somewhat of this had Hassan deemed;
But still so fond, so fair she seemed,
Too well he trusted to the slave
Whose treachery deserved a grave:
And on that eve had gone to mosque,
And thence to feast in his kiosk.

Alexandre-Marie Colin, The Giaour

Alexandre-Marie Colin, The Giaour

‘Yes, Leila sleeps beneath the wave,
But his shall be a redder grave;
Her spirit pointed well the steel
Which taught that felon heart to feel.
He called the Prophet, but his power
Was vain against the vengeful Giaour:
He called on Allah – but the word.
Arose unheeded or unheard.
Thou Paynim fool! could Leila’s prayer
Be passed, and thine accorded there?
I watched my time, I leagued with these,
The traitor in his turn to seize;
My wrath is wreaked, the deed is done,
And now I go – but go alone.’

Eugene Delacroix: Combat of the Giaour and the Pasha (detail)

Eugene Delacroix: Combat of the Giaour and the Pasha (detail)

Yet died he by a stranger’s hand,
And stranger in his native land;
Yet died he as in arms he stood,
And unavenged, at least in blood.
But him the maids of Paradise
Impatient to their halls invite,
And the dark Heaven of Houris’ eyes
On him shall glance for ever bright;
They come – their kerchiefs green they wave,
And welcome with a kiss the brave!
Who falls in battle ‘gainst a Giaour
Is worthiest an immortal bower.

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”Tis twice three years at summer tide
Since first among our freres he came;
And here it soothes him to abide
For some dark deed he will not name.
But never at our vesper prayer,
Nor e’er before confession chair
Kneels he, nor recks he when arise
Incense or anthem to the skies,
But broods within his cell alone,
His faith and race alike unknown.
The sea from Paynim land he crost,
And here ascended from the coast;
Yet seems he not of Othman race,
But only Christian in his face:
I’d judge him some stray renegade,
Repentant of the change he made,
Save that he shuns our holy shrine,
Nor tastes the sacred bread and wine.

Eugene Delacroix-939428

To love the softest hearts are prone,
But such can ne’er be all his own;
Too timid in his woes to share,
Too meek to meet, or brave despair;
And sterner hearts alone may feel
The wound that time can never heal.
The rugged metal of the mine,
Must burn before its surface shine,
But plunged within the furnace-flame,
It bends and melts – though still the same;
Then tempered to thy want, or will,
‘Twill serve thee to defend or kill;
A breast-plate for thine hour of need,
Or blade to bid thy foeman bleed;
But if a dagger’s form it bear,
Let those who shape its edge, beware!
Thus passion’s fire, and woman’s art,
Can turn and tame the sterner heart;
From these its form and tone are ta’en,
And what they make it, must remain,
But break – before it bend again.

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My spirit shrunk not to sustain
The searching throes of ceaseless pain;
Nor sought the self-accorded grave
Of ancient fool and modern knave:
Yet death I have not feared to meet;
And the field it had been sweet,
Had danger wooed me on to move
The slave of glory, not of love.
I’ve braved it – not for honour’s boast;
I smile at laurels won or lost;
To such let others carve their way,
For high renown, or hireling pay:
But place again before my eyes
Aught that I deem a worthy prize
The maid I love, the man I hate,
And I will hunt the steps of fate,
To save or slay, as these require,
Through rending steel, and rolling fire:
Nor needest thou doubt this speech from one
Who would but do ~ what he hath done.
Death is but what the haughty brave,
The weak must bear, the wretch must crave;
Then let life go to him who gave:
I have not quailed to danger’s brow
When high and happy – need I now?

DELACROIX_Eugene_Woman_with_a_Parrot_1827

‘I loved her, Friar! nay, adored -
But these are words that all can use -
I proved it more in deed than word;
There’s blood upon that dinted sword,
A stain its steel can never lose:
‘Twas shed for her, who died for me,
It warmed the heart of one abhorred:
Nay, start not – no – nor bend thy knee,
Nor midst my sins such act record;
Thou wilt absolve me from the deed,
For he was hostile to thy creed!
The very name of Nazarene
Was wormwood to his Paynim spleen.
Ungrateful fool! since but for brands
Well wielded in some hardy hands,
And wounds by Galileans given -
The surest pass to Turkish heaven
For him his Houris still might wait
Impatient at the Prophet’s gate.
I loved her – love will find its way
Through paths where wolves would fear to prey;
And if it dares enough, ’twere hard
If passion met not some reward -
No matter how, or where, or why,
I did not vainly seek, nor sigh:
Yet sometimes, with remorse, in vain
I wish she had not loved again.
She died – I dare not tell thee how;
But look – ’tis written on my brow!
There read of Cain the curse and crime,
In characters unworn by time:
Still, ere thou dost condemn me, pause;
Not mine the act, though I the cause.
Yet did he but what I had done
Had she been false to more than one.
Faithless to him, he gave the blow;
But true to me, I laid him low:
Howe’er deserved her doom might be,
Her treachery was truth to me;
To me she gave her heart, that all
Which tyranny can ne’er enthral;
And I, alas! too late to save!
Yet all I then could give, I gave,
‘Twas some relief, our foe a grave.
His death sits lightly; but her fate
Has made me – what thou well mayest hate.
His doom was sealed – he knew it well
Warned by the voice of stern Taheer,
Deep in whose darkly boding ear
The deathshot pealed of murder near,
As filed the troop to where they fell!
He died too in the battle broil,
A time that heeds nor pain nor toil;
One cry to Mahomet for aid,
One prayer to Allah all he made:
He knew and crossed me in the fray -
I gazed upon him where he lay,
And watched his spirit ebb away:
Though pierced like pard by hunters’ steel,
He felt not half that now I feel.
I searched, but vainly searched, to find
The workings of a wounded mind;
Each feature of that sullen corse
Betrayed his rage, but no remorse.
Oh, what had vengeance given to trace
Despair upon his dying face I
The late repentance of that hour,
When penitence hath lost her power
To tear one terror from the grave,
And will not soothe, and cannot save.

Thomas Phillips: Lord Byron in Albanian dress

Thomas Phillips: Lord Byron in Albanian dress

Sources

(1) Romantic Orientalism-LU Lecture, Naji B. Oueijan, Notre Dame University-Lebanon

(2) BBC Lord Byron’s image inspired modern take on vampires

(3) Interrogating Orientalism, edited by Diane Long Hoeveler and Jeffrey Cass, The Ohio State University Press

(4) BYRON’S “TURKISH TALES”: AN INTRODUCTION Peter Cochran

(5) The Combat of the Giaour and Hassan, The Art Institute of Chicago

(6) The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Lord Byron, from The Giaour: A Fragment of a Turkish Tale

(7) A domesticated villain – Lord Byron’s The Giaour, DesOrient

(8) A Comparison Between two Turkish Heroines in Lord Byron’s Poetry: Leila in “The Giaour” and Leila in Don Juan, Mona Sulaiman Farraj Albalawi


The Sum of all Evil (2012-13), an installation by the Chapman Brothers

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In London’s idyllic Sackler Gallery one can see on display the Chapman Brothers’ masterpiece “The Sum of all Evil” (December 2013).

A word of caution is in order before I proceed. This post is potentially harmful to people without an acute and tragic sense of humour, to people who think that extreme things do not happen, to people who think that Mars is only a planet, to people who …

Francisco de Goya, Atropos, or the Fates, técnica mixta sobre revestimiento mural, 123 x 266 cm. Museo del Prado (Madrid, España)

Francisco de Goya, Atropos, or the Fates, técnica mixta sobre revestimiento mural, 123 x 266 cm. Museo del Prado (Madrid, España)

In one of Goya’s 14 black paintings, Atropos, the Goddess of Death is leading the Fates.

War brings massive death. Goya’s etchings  ‘Disasters Of War’ has been a theme of constant interest to the Chapman Brothers.

Disasters of War No.72 2000 Hand-coloured etching 24.5 x 34.5 cm    9½ x 13½"

Chapman Brothers. Disasters of War No.72 2000 Hand-coloured etching 24.5 x 34.5 cm 9½ x 13½” (Saatchi Gallery, London)

Carl von Clausewitz’s dictum “War is the continuation of politics by other means” is a total understatement in view of Goya’s etchings.

Goya, Disasters of War No. 72 (1810-1820)

Francisco de Goya, Disasters of War No. 72 (1810-1820)

‘War is Hell’ William Sherman, Union General, American Civil War.

Chapman Brothers

Chapman Brothers

In ‘The Sum of all Evil’ the protagonist is Evil, not just War.

Lets go for a boat ride.

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

In the path that takes us to evil, inevitably we pass through Colonel Kurtz.

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

White Cube reports from the Hong Kong exhibition of the work. ‘Monumental in scope and minute in detail, The Sum of all Evil (2012-13) occupies the entire ground floor of the gallery and is the most densely imagined diorama installation that the artists have produced to date.’

Chapman Brothers.

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

The fourth in a series of Hell landscapes the work features a multitude of intricately modelled Nazi soldiers, along with various characters from the fast food chain McDonald’s, committing violent, abhorrent acts set amid an apocalyptic landscape within four glass vitrines. Darkly humorous, The Sum of all Evil, as its title suggests, is imaginative rather than descriptive: a summation of all the worst possible ‘evils’, violence runs amok in a trans-historical and a-temporal arena. (White Cube).

evil1

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

‘The Sum of All Evil’ (2012-2013) features cabinets filled with tableaux of detailed depravity in the manner of ‘Hell’ (2000), which was destroyed in the 2004 Momart warehouse fire. In one glass tank, dozens of Ronald McDonalds are crucified by Nazis. In another, Ronald turns torturer. (Time Out London).

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

Once evil has been unleashed, there is no stopping it.

Evil is something that makes me feel impotent. Not because of evil itself, but because of the way ‘ordinary’ people can commit evil acts (see my relevant post ‘action against evil acts’).

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

Massive carnage, death, everywhere.

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

Chapman Brothers.The Sum of all Evil (2012-13).

Only in one serene remote spot, Adolph flies his multi coloured balloons.

Sources

1. White Cube. Jake & Dinos Chapman.

2. Time Out London. Jake and Dinos Chapman: Come and See


Wilks Restaurant, Bristol upon Avon, United Kingdom

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Bristol, UK

Bristol, UK

“Britain was a major player in the transatlantic slave trade. British ships carried 2,600,000 enslaved Africans in the 18th century to the Caribbean and the Americas. London was the leading British slaving port in the 17th century, with control over the trade until 1698. Bristol overtook London in the 1730s, and Liverpool overtook Bristol in the 1740s. ” (1)

I know, I know, I meant to write a restaurant review, and I cannot avoid becoming historical and all.

Aston Martin, Bristol UK

V8 Aston Martin Vantage

Driving a V8 Aston Martin Vantage, the trip to Bristol cannot be tiring. As a matter of fact, you don’t want it to end.

“Powered by the lightweight, compact 4.7ltr engine, V8 Vantage delivers a broad spread of effortless, exploitable performance. Mounted low and as far back in the chassis as possible Vantage’s centre of gravity is close to the road for supreme balance and handling.  Producing 426PS of peak power and 470Nm of torque, V8 Vantage sprints from 0-62mph in just 4.9secs.” (2)

I know, I know, this is meant to be a restaurant review, and I am starting to rant about cars. (Thank you Santa Claus).

Bristol, UK

Bristol, UK

I visited Bristol in November 2013, because my cousin was at the University of Bristol until December. On the occasion we went to have lunch at Wilks Restaurant, some 20 minutes walk from city centre.

I know, I know, this is not meant to be anything but a restaurant review, not my family and its members.

Wilks Restaurant, Bristol

Wilks Restaurant, Bristol

In any case, it is immaterial how we actually made it to the restaurant. But we made it, and we were one minute early! So we went in.

Wilks Restaurant, Amuse Bouche

Wilks Restaurant, Amuse Bouche

The amuse bouche was goat creamy cheese  and an onion concoction with olives and sardines. Botht asty, but the goat cheese was the winner.

Wilks Restaurant, Scallops

Wilks Restaurant, Scallops

Scallops from the Atlantic Oceaan. Fresh and perfectly cooked.

Wilks Restaurant, Truffle Risotto

Wilks Restaurant, Truffle Risotto

Truffle Risotto. Tasty and creamy!

Wilks Restaurant, Hake with Artichokes

Wilks Restaurant,Turbot Filet

Wild turbot fillet ~ parmesan gnocchi, artichokes & saute of fresh chanterelles, wild mushroom emulsion.

Wilks Restaurant, Aged Beef Tenderloin

Wilks Restaurant, Dry Aged Beef  Sirloin

Dry aged west country beef sirloin ~ caramelised onions, trompettes & spinach, black garlic & red wine jus

Wilks Restaurant, Selection of Cheeses

Wilks Restaurant, Selection of Cheeses

A selection of Cheeses to finish the meal.

Wilks is a relatively new restaurant, one year old. But they are on the right track to achieve a lot.

I liked the food, the service, the value for money ratio.

It did not come to me as a surprise that they have already received their first Michelin Star. More could be on their way.

Street Art, Bristol UK

Street Art, Bristol UK

On our way back to the city center, we had the opportunity to enjoy some of the famous Bristol Street Art.

Aston Martin, Bristol UK

Aston Martin, Bristol UK

It is time to get back to London. The beautiful V8 Vantage is patiently waiting to deliver effortless performance. Lets hit the road baby!

And thank you Wilks, thank you JM!

Merry Christmas!

Sources

1. Portcities Bristol

2. Aston Martin


Osteria da Fiore, Venice, Italy

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In my visit to Venice back in October 2011 I had the opportunity to visit Osteria da Fiore, in San Polo.

Today I publish the delayed review, because the osteria is one of the best restaurants in Venice, and continues to carry with pride one Michelin Star.

Osteria da Fiore

The amuse bouche was crispy tiny shrimp (gamberetti) on a bed of white polenta. 

Amuse Bouche, Osteria Da Fiore

The first dish I tasted was a mixed raw seafood.

Carpaccio di tonno – Osteria da fiore

Misto crudo di carpaccio di tonno e scampi.

Scampi crudi - Osteria da Fiore

The Scampi were served on top of a creamy mix of fennel (finocchio) and fresh cheese.

Baccala mantecato – Osteria da fiore

The second dish I tasted was another appetizer, one of the trademarks of Venetian gastronomy: “Baccala  mantecato” (dried Atlantic cod, soaked, poached and whipped until mousse-like), served with bruschetta spiced with garlic.

Overall a perfect light lunch in a wonderful environment.

 



Renato Guttuso: pictor diabolicus, “devilish painter”?

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Self-portrait, 1936

Self-portrait, 1936

I was introduced to the work of Renato Guttuso back in 1996, when Whitechapel Gallery in London exhibited some of his paintings.

Today I pay tribute to the great realist painter, whose vibrant colors remind me of the Mediterranean, the Sea, the Countryside, the smells and the tastes.

Crucifixion, 1941

Crucifixion, 1941

Crucifixion was the painting that led the Vatican to declare that Guttoso was a pictor diabolicus, a devilish painter.

Crucifixion - detail

Crucifixion – detail

The naked Mary Magdalen leans on the crucified Jesus.

Only the Holy Mother is dressed in her blue gown.

Crucifixion - Guard

Crucifixion – Guard

The Roman guards are riding their horses naked.

The influence of cubism is felt all over the landscape and the almost sculptural bodies.

Landscape with Lovers (pastel on paper);Guttuso, Renato ;pastel on paper;600 X 419;Estorick Collection, London

Landscape with Lovers (pastel on paper);Guttuso, Renato; pastel on paper; 600 X 419;Estorick Collection, London

The “Landscape with lovers” is another type of landscape. Guttuso here is almost poetical. And I like this more than the loaded and symbolic and rebellious “Crucifixion”.

The market of Vucciria in Palermo is one of the most colorful places on this Earth. Guttuso painted it in a glorious way.

La Vucciria, 1974

La Vucciria, 1974

“The Vucciria market, Guttuso said, was one of his first discoveries when he moved to Palermo as a student in the early 1930s. “When I began to paint, among my first subjects were those colors, those planes of light.” But his great painting of the market was not done until 1974, when he was living in Varese, Lombardy, “under the pallid light of the north.” He said the picture was “a great still life” imbued with all the noise, the energy and the violence of “the markets of poor countries.” In order to paint from life, Guttuso had an agent ship him the eggs, the cardoons, the tuna, by air from Palermo to Milan. He then persuaded a local butcher to loan him a side of beef  “for no more than two hours” so he could sketch it into the composition. The minutes ticked by, and then the hours. The butcher was counting how long his beef would survive without refrigeration.  Guttuso, meanwhile, was molding those ribs and haunches into his most powerful memento mori.” (1)

La Vucciria - detail

La Vucciria – detail

The curves of a Sicilian woman blend with the cuts of swordfish.

La Vucciria - detail

La Vucciria – detail

The beef carcass demands respect, next to the feeble rabbit.

La Vucciria - detail

La Vucciria – detail

Cheese and cured meets are plentiful.

This is why I consider Guttoso primarily a painter of the Senses. Looking into these details one cannot help but sense with her whole existence the magnificence of the goods of the market and the  pleasure of being alive.

Woman

Portrait of Mimise with Red Hat, 1940

You smell the rose, you sense the presence of Mimise, even though she is looking down. The sensual overflows and overpowers everything else. Guttuso does this almost magical transformation by using colors as he has perceived them since he was born in 1912 in  in Bagheria, near Palermo (Sicily).

Guttuso was a communist, and a member of the Italian Communist Party (PCI).

Guttoso painting "Telephones" - Image ReferenceSCF1973001W00002/15(PAR378338)© Ferdinando Scianna/Magnum Photos

Guttoso painting “Telephones” – Image ReferenceSCF1973001W00002/15(PAR378338)© Ferdinando Scianna/Magnum Photos

He was aware of the impact of technology on everyday life, and he painted it in his own unique way.

Telephones 1982

Telephones, 1980

In 1946 with Birolli, Vedova, Morlotti, Turcato and others formed the group Fronte Nuovo delle Arti. Made frequent visits to Paris to study modern French art and for a time was influenced by Picasso. Many of his works have been inspired by the poverty and struggles of the Sicilian peasantry. His later works also include large paintings of the student riots in Paris in May 1968, the funeral of the Italian Communist leader Togliatti. (2) 

Santa Panagia (Sicily) 1956 by Renato Guttuso 1912-1987

Santa Panagia (Sicily) 1956 by Renato Guttuso 1912-1987

I close this short tribute with another landscape painting. Santa Panagia, in Sicily. “Viale Santa Panagia is a street which runs through the ancient Greek quarters of Tyche and Akradina in Siracusa, a Sicilian city that Guttuso was fond of and visited frequently in the 1950s.” (Tate Gallery).

Sources

1. Renato Guttuso: Frederika Randall reviews exhibit at the Vittoriano

2. Renato Guttuso. Artist Biography. Tate Gallery.

3. Guttuso. Thams and Hudson. 1996.


Two Masters of Light: Claude Lorrain and J.M.W. Turner

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JMW Turner; Slave-Ship; detail

JMW Turner; Slave-Ship; detail

An enormous deep-red sunset over a stormy sea, an indication of an approaching typhoon.A detail from JMW Turner’s “Slave-Ship”.

Painting is about light. Everything revolves around light.

Everything derives its existence one way or another from light. In this post I revisit some of the works of two masters of light, one from the baroque period, and another from the romantic leading to the modern.

Claude Lorrain; Self-portrait

Claude Lorrain; Self-portrait

One is the French Claude Lorrain (1600 – 1682).

The other is the English J.M.W. Turner ( 1775 – 1851). Both Turner and Lorrain are primarily landscape (and seascape) painters.

My mother introduced me ot the work of Turner.

I then discovered Lorrain in Room 15 of the National Gallery in London.

JMW Turner; Self-portrait 1799

JMW Turner; Self-portrait 1799

Turner was inspired by Lorrain’s landscapes and treatment of light. But Turner has his own style, in spite of the fact that he imitated Lorrain in his early period.

Lorrain is extremely tidy, the picture is well organised, the light is gentle.

Turner on the other hand is almost chaotic, the light is bursting out at the viewer, the lines are blurry.

Lorrain’s baroque light gave birth to the violent romantic and ultimately modern light of Turner.

Claude Lorrain; Marriage of Isaac and Rebekah 1648

Claude Lorrain; Marriage of Isaac and Rebekah (The Mill) 1648; National Gallery, London

I start looking at pictures with one of the two Lorrain paintings in Room 15 of the National Gallery in London: The Mill, or Marriage of Isaac and Rebekah. It is a landscape in late summer afternoon. It is hanging in the same room with the Seaport with the Embarkation of the Queen of Sheba. “Claude was once an apprentice pastry chef. What he was really good at was the vista: enormous, complicated distances measured in landmarks, perspectives, light saturation and atmospheric tone. His paintings endlessly delay your journey from foreground to horizon. The wholeness of his compositions, the roundedness of the space he creates, the way he makes your eye alight here and there without any feeling of being led – these things are extremely pleasurable.” (2).

This is mild introduction to Lorrain’s depiction of light.

Claude Lorrain; Seaport with the Embarkation of the Queen of Sheba 1648

Claude Lorrain; Seaport with the Embarkation of the Queen of Sheba 1648; National Gallery London

Not so with the seaport. Here the morning sun is bright and glorious. Like all of Claude’s Embarkations, the Seaport is a coastal view, depicted in early morning light. Including the sun within a painting was Claude’s greatest early innovation. Exactly half-way up the canvas in this stateliest of his seaport compositions, it is the basis of its pictorial unity, all the colours and tones adjusted in relation to it – Claude’s palm and finger prints can be seen in many places in the sky where he smoothed transitions from one passage to the next. (5)

Seaport - detail

Seaport – detail

“By the end of the 18th century, when Turner was in his 20s, Claude’s work was held in high esteem in Britain: at least 30 of his paintings were held in collections, and his work was also a major influence on private parks and gardens. If we can’t get enough Turner now, they couldn’t get enough Claude then.” (2)

JMW Turner; Dido building Carthage; National Gallery London

JMW Turner; Dido building Carthage 1815; National Gallery London

“When (Turner) died he bequeathed to the nation a large number of his paintings, including ‘Dido building Carthage’ and ‘Sun Rising through Vapour’. These two paintings came with the condition that they should be displayed alongside Claude’s ‘Landscape with the Marriage of Isaac and Rebecca’ and ‘Seaport with the Embarkation of the Queen of Sheba’. By linking these paintings together Turner wanted to ensure that his association with  Claude (Lorrain) would endure beyond his lifetime.” (6)

Dido - detail

Dido – detail

“If you look at this painting you’ll see more than one perspective: there’s the regular horizon line, however the perspective of the building to the right of the canvas does not meet up with this. Turner was experimenting with various viewpoints, asking us to take multiple journeys through the canvas to discover the landscape from many positions. It’s odd that we look up on the buildings in the foreground, yet almost feel that we can look down on those in the centre distance. What first appears to be a classically ordered composition then turns into a sort of jigsaw puzzle, an extraordinary spatial game in which there are several pockets of space for us to explore. His use of colour is also intriguing; vast washes of luminous yellows and intense greens have a transcendent and immaterial quality. These deep pools of colour do not create structure or fix the space – they seem to hover on the canvas and create fleeting effects of light. With these approaches to painting Turner layed the foundations of Impressionism and sowed the seed of what would eventually become abstract art.” (7)

JMW Turner; The Decline of the Carthaginian Empire 1817

JMW Turner; The Decline of the Carthaginian Empire 1817; Tate Britain, London

In the decline of the Carthaginian Empire, Turner painted the setting sun. “Claude Lorrain was Turner’s favourite old master painter. This (The Decline of the Carthaginian Empire) is one of his greatest essays in Claude’s style. It is part of a pair of paintings showing the rise and fall of a great empire; here, Carthage’s decline is symbolised by the setting sun. Turner saw the rise and fall of once-great empires as a historical inevitability, confirmed by the fall of Napoleon, but threatening to overtake the victorious British. Today, the other half of the pair Dido building Carthage; or the Rise of the Carthaginian Empire hangs, at Turner’s request, alongside a painting by Claude in the National Gallery.” (4)

JMW Turner; The Decline of the Carthaginian Empire 1817 - detail

JMW Turner; The Decline of the Carthaginian Empire 1817 – detail

It is 1817 and already the emergence of the new light is visible. The light that fuses the elements, the blurs the contours, that unifies the canvas.

JMW Turner Sunrise with Sea Monsters 1945

JMW Turner Sunrise with Sea Monsters 1845

Jumping from 1817 to 1845, the “Sunrise with Sea Monsters”is an abstract painting. The object of the painting is barely visible. The whole painting is about light. The “object” is for Turner just an excuse to paint the light.

“… in 1843 Ruskin published the first volume of his book Modern Painters – placing Turner at their head. While critics accused Turner of extravagance and exaggeration, outdoing each other with comparisons of his pictures to lobster salad, soapsuds and whitewash, beetroot or mustard, Ruskin rooted his analysis (at least at first) in Turner’s truth to nature. He became the standard-bearer of a new generation of Turner admirers, now usually professional, middle class or newly rich, who embraced his work for its modernity. ” (1)

JMW Turner; Landscape with Distant River and Bay 1840-1850

JMW Turner; Landscape with Distant River and Bay 1840-1850; Musee du Louvre, Paris

“Of all the British artists to revive European landscape painting, Turner went furthest, pushing the dissolution of forms in light to the edge of abstraction. This painting belongs to a group of unfinished works composed around 1845…” (8)

JMW Turner; The Junction of the Severn and the Wye; 1806; Tate Britain, London

JMW Turner; The Junction of the Severn and the Wye; 1806; Tate Britain, London

“Liber Studorium” was a sample book of Turner’s landscapes. The “Confluence of the Severn and the Wye” was one plate of this anthology, inspired by Claude Lorrain, and it supplied the basis for the 1845 composition in the Louvre. (8). Here we have a mnifestation of the circularity of Time. The aging Turner returns to his youth, to the themes that inspired him, and reworks them, embeds them in the new Turner of the old age, but of the New Art, abstraction.

Claude Lorrain; The Dissembarkation of Kleopatra at Tarsus; 1648; Musee du Louvre, PAris

Claude Lorrain; The Dissembarkation of Cleopatra at Tarsus; 1648; Musee du Louvre, PAris

As I arrive at the closure of this post, I want to look again at one of Claude’s magnificent early morning port scenes.

“A sun – drenched sea port in a perfect synthesis of the Bolognese classical ideal and the luminosity of the Italianizing Dutch school.” (8)

Dissembarcation - detail

Dissembarcation – detail

And then return to Turner’s ventures into abstraction.

Landscape with Water circa 1840-5 Joseph Mallord William Turner

JMW Turner; Landscape with Water circa 1840-5; Tate Britain

“Indeed, come 1845’s Landscape with WaterTivoli and Turner is verging on abstraction. Figures, buildings and other narrative details are eliminated, the sun’s almighty white reflection off the Tiber dissolving the entire scene. Late in life, though still attracted by Claude’s settings, Turner had long since left behind Claude’s style – his intensities of light, pulsations of energy and dissolutions of form celebrate the numinous rather than the physical.” (3)

Sources

1. JMW Turner, Tate Gallery

2. Turner and Claude. The Guardian

3. Turner Inspired. The Telegraph.

4. The Decline of the Carthaginian Empire

5. The National Gallery. Companion Guide. Erika Langmuir.

6. The Turner Bequest.

7. Artwork Of The Week – ‘Dido Building Carthage‘ By J.M.W. Turner

8. The Louvre Collections. Paris 1999.


Η κανναβης εις τον Ελληνικον Πολιτισμον και την Κοινωνιαν – Cannabis in Greek Culture and Society

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Προοιμιον

Το παρον πονημα ειναι εθνικου και ηθικοπλασματικου χαρακτηρα, οσονουπω δε και απελευθερωτικον καθοσον καταγραφει μεθοδικα επιστημονικα και παντελως ουδετερα την πορειαν της κανναβεως εις την ημετεραν πατριδαν, με εμφασιν εις την κοινωνιαν και τον πολιτισμον. Το μεγιστο ερωτημα περι της διασυσχετισεως και αλληλοπροσδιορισμου αναμεσα και ενδιαμεσα πατριδος πολιτισμου και κοινωνιας δεν θα το πραγματευθω. Ας περιμενετε αγαπητοι αναγνωστες δια το προσεχες μελλον. Ειναι ομως και μουσικοχορευτικον το πονημα, καθοσον η πολλη δουλεια σκοτωνει τον αφεντη. Εχει λοιπον και τραγουδια και χορο, χωρις ομως να χανει εις τιποτις τον επιστημονικον χαρακτηρα του.

apothikevsisporon

Η αυστηρωτατη ουδετεροτης και αντικειμενικοτης του πονηματος αφορα επισης και το μεγιστο ερωτημα του κατα ποσον το χασισακι ειναι εθιστικο ή οχι, κατα ποσον σκοτωνει ή οχι, κατα ποσον σε βαραει και σε ριχνει ή οχι. Ποιος ειμαι εγω σε τελευταια αναλυση να διαπραγματευθω τετοια τεραστια ερωτηματα; Οχι! Αγαπητη Αναγνωστρια, δεν θα το πραξω! Διοτι απλουστατα ομολογω οτι ειμαι αναρμοδιος. Και εις την αγαπητωτατην πατριδα μας οπου ειμεθα ο ενας πλεον αναρμοδιος του ετερου, θα αποφυγω το ολισθημα!

Οπως παντα σε τετοιες περιπτωσεις, οφειλω να προειδοποιησω τις ευπαθεις ομαδες να αποφυγουν την αναγνωση και την ακροαση καθοσον θα υποστουν βλαβην μεγαλην, ισως δε και ανηκεστον, με απροβλεπτους συνεπειας γενικως και ειδικως. Ενδεικτικως αναφερω και ζητω την αποφυγην και αποστροφην των: καθαρων, αγνων, φιλησυχων χιμπατζηδων, θρησκευτικων και ηθικοπλαστικων σωματειων, φιλοπροοδων οργανωσεων, αποστρατων αξιωματικων και πολιτικων, εξημερωμενων ταρανδων, αποτριχωμενων λεπιδοπτερων, φιλελευθερων διανοουμενων, και αλλων ων ουκ εστι αριθμος. Πρωτιστως ομως, ολων οσων δεν εκαπνισαν ουδεποπωτε εις τον βιον τους ενα τσιγαρακι.

ΚΑΝΑΒΟΥΡΙΑ ΦΥΤΟ

Ασμα: ΒΑΛΤΕ ΜΟΥ ΔΥΟ ΚΑΝΑΒΟΥΡΙΕΣ

Στιχοι και Μουσικη: Μιχαλη Δασκαλακη

Οταν πεθάνω θά(φ)ψτε με
σε μία γωνιά μονάχο
Και δίπλα το μπουζούκι μου – αμάν, αμάν
παρηγοριά μου να ‘χω.

Κανείς δε θέλω για να ‘ρθει – βρ’αμάν, αμάν
καντήλι να μ’ανάψει
ούτε κι αυτή που αγαπώ – αμάν, αμάν
για μένανε να κλάψει.

Βάλτε μου δύο καναβουριές – αμάν, αμάν
τον ίσχιο τους να ρίχνουν,
όταν φυσάει ο άνεμος – αμάν, αμάν
γλυκά να με δροσίζουν.

Βάλτε μου δύο καναβουριές
να κάνουν καναβούρια,
για να ‘ρχονται οι φίλοι μας – κι οι γκόμενες
να γίνονται μαστούρια.

Ειναι βαρειες οι καταβολες

(Απο εδω προεκυψε και η αλλαλαχη “ειναι βαρεια η φουντα του τσολια”).

Ενα από τα αρχαιότερα ιστορικά ευρήµατα, ένα αποµεινάρι της  ανθρώπινης υφαντουργίας,  είναι ένα κοµµάτι ύφασµα (καµβάς) φτιαγµένο από κάνναβη το οποίο χρονολογείται  -περίπου- από το 8000 π.Χ. Το παλαιότερο διασωθέν τεµάχιο από χαρτί κατασκευασµένο  πριν από 2.000 χρόνια στην  Κίνα φτιάχτηκε και αυτό από κάνναβη. Ακόµα παλαιότερα, τουλάχιστον 2.500 χρόνια πριν, οι τεχνίτες των Φαραώ χρησιµοποιούσαν την κάνναβη ως δοµικό συστατικό ανάµεσα στα άλλα υλικά για το χτίσιµο των πυραµίδων. (1)

tourqie

Τα παλαιότερα αρχαιολογικά ευρήματα χρήσης της κάνναβης τα βρίσκουμε στην Ταϊβάν και στην Κίνα πριν από περίπου 6 χιλιάδες χρόνια, ενώ σπόροι κάνναβης βρέθηκαν και στη σημερινή Ρουμανία σε θρακικό τάφο που χρονολογείται στα 3000 π.Χ. Απ’ ό,τι φαίνεται, το «μαγικό φυτό» συνοδεύει τις μεταναστεύσεις των ινδοευρωπαϊκών φυλών και πιθανώς έφτασε στην Ευρώπη μέσω των Σκυθών. Ο Ηρόδοτος μας διηγείται ότι οι Σκύθες έριχναν σπόρους κάνναβης σε χάλκινα τρίποδα, και οι μεθυστικοί ατμοί που δημιουργούνταν συνόδευαν τις θρησκευτικές τελετουργίες και τις γιορτές τους, γεγονός που επιβεβαιώθηκε το 1940 από αρχαιολογικά ευρήματα σε σκυθικούς τάφους στα σύνορα μεταξύ Μογγολίας και Σιβηρίας. (6)

Η κάνναβη είναι ένα φυτό με τρία υποείδη: Cannabis indica (ινδική), Cannabis sativa (ήμερη, κλωστική) και Cannabis ruderalis, η άγρια εξαδέλφη τους που φυτρώνει εκεί που δεν τη σπέρνουν. Και ενώ στο εξωτερικό ο διαχωρισμός μεταξύ ινδικής και κλωστικής είναι σαφέστερος, αφού η πρώτη λέγεται Cannabis και η δεύτερη Hemp, στην Ελλάδα, αυτή η συνωνυμία έχει προκαλέσει στην κλωστική βιομηχανική πολλά… τραβήγματα με τον νόμο. Και ενώ η ίδια περιέχει σε πολύ μικρό ποσοστό τη δραστική ουσία του χασίς (0,2%, που είναι το επιτρεπτό όριο σύμφωνα με την ΕΕ), σε αντίθεση με τις ποικιλίες της ινδικής που την περιέχουν από 7% ως 25%, η σύγχυση παραμένει μεγάλη.(2)

Γαμησι, Χασισι, Επιστροφη στη Φυση

Γαμησι, Χασισι, Επιστροφη στη Φυση

Οι λεξεις (5)

Χασις: η ινδικη κανναβη. [Το ρητινώδες εκχύλισµα που εκκρίνεται από τους βλαστούς του ονοµάζεται «χασίς» και χρησιµοποιείται για κάπνισµα προκειµένου να αυξήσει την ενεργητικότητα και την ευχάριστη διάθεση. (1)]

Χασικλης: προσωπο που κανει συστηματικα χρηση χασις.

Μαυρη, Μαυρο: το χασις.

Φουντα: το χασις, ως ναρκωτικη ουσια.

Τεκες: καταγωγιο οπου γινεται χρηση ναρκωτικων, χασικληδικο. Η λεξη ειναι τουρκικης προελευσης (tekke), και σημαινει και μοναστηρι, οπου ασκουνται δερβισηδες.

Κανναβουρι: ο καρπος του φυτου της κανναβης, ο οποιος χρησιμοποιειται ως τροφη για ωδικα πτηνα.

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Κανναβοσχ(κ)οινο: το σχοινι που ειναι κατασκευασμενο απο ινες κανναβης.

Κανναβατσο: το χοντρο υφασμα απο λιναρι, βαμβακι και κανναβη, που χρησιμοποιειται για την κατασκευη πανιων πλοιου, σακιων. κλπ.

Εκτός από τα πανιά (από εκεί βγαίνει και ο όρος κανναβάτσο), τα σχοινιά και τους σπάγκους, η κάνναβη είναι ιδανική και για την παραγωγή χαρτιού (με τετραπλάσιες ποσότητες ινών ανά στρέμμα απ’ ό,τι τα δέντρα και πολύ πιο φιλικά στο περιβάλλον από την τοξική κοπή), για την παραγωγή μονωτικών υλικών (για παράδειγμα, το καννάβι που χρησιμοποιεί ο υδραυλικός), όπως και για την παραγωγή ελαίων για σαπούνια, βερνίκια και καλλυντικά. Δεν είναι τυχαίο ότι τα υποαλλεργικά πάνινα παπούτσια και ρούχα κατασκευάζονται από ίνες κάνναβης, ενώ τα αμαξώματα των αυτοκινήτων αντικαθιστούν σταδιακά τις ίνες φάιμπεργκλας με εκείνες της κάνναβης. Αλλά και ως καύσιμο, η μεθανόλη και διάφορα άλλα είδη έχουν την ίδια καταγωγή. Θέλοντας να επιβραβεύσει όλες αυτές τις μαγικές επιδόσεις του παρεξηγημένου φυτού, η ΕΕ εξέδωσε ήδη από το 1990 την οδηγία 1308/1990, επιδοτώντας την καλλιέργεια κάνναβης. (2)

Η βιομηχανια: Καναβουργειο Εδεσσης

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Το κανναβουργείο της Εδεσσας κατασκευαστηκε το 1908 από τον Αυστριακό μηχανικό Λεοπόλδο Αϊγλ και λειτούργησε από το 1913 μέχρι το 1967. Ηταν το πρώτο εργοστάσιο στην Ελλάδα που έφτιαχνε σπάγκους και καραβόσκοινα από ινδική κάνναβη, με ημερήσια παραγωγή που έφτανε τα 1.200 κιλά. Η διαδικασία κατεργασίας της πρώτης ύλης ήταν εξαιρετικά δύσκολη αλλά και μεθοδική. Στους χώρους που άλλοτε έσφυζε από ζωή σήμερα στέκουν βουβά τα εξαρτήματα, οι μηχανές, ο υδροστρόβιλος, οι άξονες μετάδοσης, η γεννήτρια, οι τροχοί και άλλα.

Τα φορεία που έχουν απομείνει στον χώρο του κανναβουργείου θυμίζουν τις δύσκολες εποχές με τα πολλά ατυχήματα από τους δεκάδες ιμάντες που χρησιμοποιούνταν για τη μετάδοση της κίνησης. Στο μπροστινό μέρος του κτιρίου λειτουργεί το καλαίσθητο εστιατόριο «Κανναβουργείο». Από τον χώρο του εστιατορίου μπορείτε να δείτε τους χώρους επεξεργασίας και παραγωγής σκοινιών, καθώς και τις παλιές μηχανές.

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Ασμα: ΟΙ ΚΑΠΝΟΥΛΟΥΔΕΣ

Στιχοι και Μουσικη: Μπαγιαντερας

(Το καταπληκτικον του ασματος αρχιζει απο τον τιτλο του. Ειναι στον πληθυντικο, ενω η πρωταγωνιστρια ειναι μια, η ομορφη καπνουλου. Πληρης συγχυση, και πληρης διαυγεια! Χαιρε Αρχαιο Ελληνικο Πνευμα!)

Βρε καπνουλού μου έμορφη σ’ αρέσει το ντουμάνι
κι εμένανε με παρατάς ρέστονε και χαρμάνη.

Όταν σχολάσεις γίνεσαι μια κούκλα πρώτη φίνα
και την πουλεύεις πονηρά στη Βούλα στη Ραφήνα.

Τους μάγκες πάντα προτιμάς κι όλους τους παραλήδες
μα ζούλα πάντα κυνηγάς τους έμορφους νταήδες.

Και στο φινάλε πας γλεντάς με μάγκες στους τεκέδες
γιατί σ’ αρέσει ο μπαγλαμάς μπουζούκια κι αργιλέδες

Παραβατικοτητα: Ακομη και ο Αγιος Κολαζεται

Με χασίσι μυρωδάτο φορτωμένος υπάλληλος της Εισαγγελίας Αθηνών , σε όχημα του υπουργείου ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗΣ!!!

Xas 1
«Αστυνομικοί του Τμήματος Δίωξης Ναρκωτικών Ηγουμενίτσας, σήμερα (23.02.2013) το πρωί στη Νέα Σελεύκεια Θεσπρωτίας, συνέλαβαν 48χρονο ημεδαπό, υπάλληλο του Υπουργείου Δικαιοσύνης, ο οποίος κατελήφθη να μεταφέρει με κρατικό αυτοκίνητο μεγάλη ποσότητα κάνναβης.
Πιο αναλυτικά, στο πλαίσιο οργανωμένης αστυνομικής επιχείρησης, εντοπίστηκε και ακινητοποιήθηκε το κρατικό αυτοκίνητο, το οποίο οδηγούσε ο δράστης και στον έλεγχο, που διενεργήθηκε στο εσωτερικό του, βρέθηκαν (137) συσκευασίες – δέματα κάνναβης, συνολικού βάρους (149.016) γραμμαρίων, τα οποία και κατασχέθηκαν.
  • Σε βάρος του συλληφθέντα σχηματίστηκε δικογραφία κακουργηματικού χαρακτήρα για τα αδικήματα της μεταφοράς και εμπορίας ναρκωτικών ουσιών.
Χαρακτηριστικό της μεθοδολογίας, του σχεδιασμού και του τρόπου δράσης του συλληφθέντα, αποτελεί το γεγονός ότι για την μεταφορά των ναρκωτικών χρησιμοποίησε υπηρεσιακό αυτοκίνητο,του Υπουργείου Δικαιοσύνης (φέρει εξωτερικά τις χαρακτηριστικές ενδείξεις οχήματος δημόσιας υπηρεσίας), με προφανή σκοπό να αποτρέψει ή/και να αποπροσανατολίσει τους ελέγχους των διωκτικών Αρχών.
Για τους ιδίους λόγους είχε αλλοιώσει την ημερομηνία και τα στοιχεία ταυτότητας στα συνοδευτικά έγγραφα του οχήματος(Διαταγή πορείας και Δελτίο κίνησης), τα οποία κατασχέθηκαν επίσης. Όπως προέκυψε από την αστυνομική έρευνα, τελικός προορισμός του φορτιού των ναρκωτικών, ήταν η Αθήνα…”
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Ασμα: ΤΟ Β(Π)ΑΠΟΡΙ ΑΠ’ΤΗΝ ΠΕΡΣΙΑ

Στις 7 Ιανουαριου 1977 οι Αρχες στα Ισθμια της Κορινθιας απο καρφωτη πιανουν το μοτορσιπ “Γκλορια” με 11 τοννους χασισι. Ο Τσιτσανης γραφει λιγο μετα το θρυλικο παραβατικο τραγουδι που χαλαει κοσμο ακομη και σημερα  (περισσοτερα στον Γκρεκο).

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Το βαπόρι απ’ την Περσία
πιάστηκε στην Κορινθία
Τόννοι έντεκα γεμάτο
με χασίσι μυρωδάτο

Τώρα κλαίν’ όλα τ’ αλάνια
που θα μείνουνε χαρμάνια

Βρε κουρνάζε μου τελώνη
τη ζημιά ποιος τη πληρώνει
Και σ’ αυτή την ιστορία
μπήκαν τα λιμεναρχεία

Τώρα κλαίν’ όλα τ’ αλάνια
που θα μείνουνε χαρμάνια

Ήταν προμελετημένοι
καρφωτοί και λαδωμένοι
Δυο μεμέτια, τα καημένα,
μεσ’ στο κόλπο ήταν μπλεγμένα

Τώρα κλαίν’ όλα τ’ αλάνια
που θα μείνουνε χαρμάνια

Η εκτελεση που ακολουθει ειναι με τον αειμνηστο Τσιτσανη. Που λεει το βαπορι παπορι. Ως εδει. Αλα τις!!!!

Ο τεκες και το μαυρο (7, σ. 110-111)

Ο Πειραιας τοτε ητανε γεματος τεκεδες. Ο πρωτος τεκες, εχω ακουσει, ητανε του Ζουανου του Καλοκαιρινου, τα λουτρα…

Μες στου Ζουανου την αυλη

σκοτωσαν ενα χασικλη

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Ολοι οι τεκεδες ητανε ιδιοι. Ιδιοι κι απαραλλαχτοι. Μια καμαρα ητανε τεκες. Ενα σπιτακι ητανε τεκες. Ενα αλλο παραγκακι… Μολις φουμαρουνε οι χασικληδες, δεν τους ενδιαφερει αν ζουνε ή αν πεθαινουνε. Ειναι ησυχοτατοι, δεν πειραζουν ανθρωπο. Μονον να φαν θελουν οταν πεινασουν και τιποτε παραπανω, και να κοινηθουνε να βλεπουνε ονειρα. Δεν τους νοιαζει αν ο τεκες ειναι ενα παληοσπιτο.   Το ιδιο ητανε και του Μιχαλου, στα Χιωτικα.

Χαρμανης ειμαι απ’ το πρωι

και παω να φουμαρω

μες στον τεκε του Μιχαλου

ποχει το φινο μαυρο.

magkali

Κατω, αλλου ειχε χωμα, αλλου σανιδια αλλα περισσοτερο χωμα, γιατι καπου επεταζαμε και κανενα ζαφειρι. Ειχαμε δε εκει, μπροστα εκει στο λουλα, το μαγκαλι με τις φωτιες. Απο διαφορα καρβουνακια, απο καρυδια, απο αμυγδαλα, απο θυμαρια του βουνου. Ειχαμε και εναν ντενεκε, το οποιο εφτουσαμε ολοι μεσα. Την ωρα που επινες σ’ επιανε ο βηχας, ξερω γω τι, και για να βγαλεις, να καθαρισουν, ηταν μπροστα εκει ο ντενεκες με το νερο.

Ασμα: ΟΤΑΝ ΚΑΠΝΙΖΕΙ Ο ΛΟΥΛΑΣ

Στιχοι και Μουσικη: Γιωργος Μητσακης

Όταν καπνίζει ο λουλάς
εσύ δεν πρέπει να μιλάς.
Κοίταξε τριγύρω οι μάγκες
κάνουν όλοι, κάνουν τουμπεκί.

Άκου που παίζει ο μπαγλαμάς
και πάτα αργιλέ για μας.
Σα θα γίνουμε μαστούρια,
θα ‘μαστε πολύ προσεχτικοί.

Κανένα μάτι μη μας δει
και μας μπλοκάρουν δηλαδή.
Να μη βρούνε καμιάν αιτία
και μας πάνε όλους φυλακή.

Οι νομοι 

Σύμφωνα με το άρθρο 5 του ν.1681/1919 περί αλητείας και επαιτείας, τιμωρούνταν {όστις, άεργος ων ή αποδεδειγμένως διάγων άτακτον βίον, επιδίδεται καθ’ έξιν εις χασισοποτίαν, φοιτών προς τούτο εις τοιούτου είδους καταγώγια ή άλλα ενδιαιτήματα με ποινή φυλάκισης ενός έτους και σε περίπτωση υποτροπής μέχρι δύο έτη. Κατά παλαιότερη, προσφιλή τακτική του νομοθέτη, τιμωρείται εδώ όχι μια συγκεκριμένη πράξη, αλλά ένας αφηρημένος αντικοινωνικός τύπος ατόμου. (8)

alefa03

Ακολούθησαν ο ν. 2107/1920 «περί απαγορεύσεως της καλλιέργειας, της εμπορίας και της καταναλώσεως ινδικής καννάβεως», ο νομοτεχνικά πληρέστερος ως προς την τυποποίηση των πράξεων διακίνησης και χρήσης ναρκωτικών ν.5539/1932 «περί μονοπωλίου των ναρκωτικών φαρμάκων και του ελέγχου αυτών», ο οποίος περιλάμβανε για πρώτη φορά και πίνακα των απαγορευμένων ναρκωτικών ουσιών, ο ν. 6025/1934, ο α.ν. 2430/1940 και το ν.δ. 3084/1954, «περί τιμωρίας των παραβατών ναρκωτικών και μεταχειρίσεως των τοξικομανών», όπου πλέον αυστηροποιούνται σημαντικά οι προβλεπόμενες ποινές για πράξεις διακίνησης (κάθειρξη μέχρι 10 χρόνια και χρηματική ποινή μέχρι 10.000.000 δραχμές). (9)

Στο Αρθρο 1, παραγραφος 3 του νομου 4139/2013 οριζεται οτι:

“Στις παραπάνω ουσίες (ναρκωτικα) δεν περιλαμβάνονται τα ακατέργαστα συγκομιζόμενα προϊόντα που προκύπτουν από την καλλιέργεια ποικιλιών κάνναβης του είδους Cannabis Sativa L χαμηλής περιεκτικότητας σε τετρα− ϋδροκανναβινόλη (THC) και συγκεκριμένα μέχρι 0,2%, σύμφωνα με τις εκάστοτε ισχύουσες διατάξεις της νομοθεσίας της Ευρωπαϊκής Ένωσης. Με κοινή απόφαση των Υπουργών Αγροτικής Ανάπτυξης και Τροφίμων και Δικαιοσύνης, Διαφάνειας και Ανθρωπίνων Δικαιωμάτων ορίζονται οι όροι και οι προϋποθέσεις καλλιέργειας των ποικιλιών κάνναβης του είδους Cannabis Sativa L, οι έλεγχοι τήρησης των όρων και προϋποθέσεων και κάθε σχετικό θέμα.

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Τα κανναβοσκοινα

Οταν οι Πειραιωτες μαγκες χαρμανιαζανε, βγαινανε τσαρκα στο λιμανι για να βρουνε παλιους καβους. Μολις βρησκανε ενα, τον κοβανε ψιλα κομματια και τα τριβανε να φτιαξουνε χαρμανι. Το στεγνωνανε με προχειρο τροπο, και μετα το φουμαρανε. Αυτο μου το αφηγηθηκε φιλος Πειραιωτης που τα ακουγε στις γειτονιες οταν ητανε ητανε παιδι.

1959

Ασχετος Επιλογος

Κλεινω αυτο το σεμνο αφιερωμα με ενα δημοτικο τραγουδι που βρηκα ολως τυχαιως (3). 

Επέθανε ο Γιάνναρος και έκανε διαθήκη,
Να μην τον θάψουν σ` εκκλησιά, ούτε σε μοναστήρι,
Να πάνε να τον χώσουνε σ` ένα σταυροδρόμι,
ν` αφήσουνε τον πούτσο του τρεις πιθαμές απάνω,
για να περνάει ο βασιλιάς να δένει τ` άλογό του.
Τ` ακούσαν τρεις καλόγριες και πα` να τον εβρούνε.
Η μια παίρνει το κερί κι η άλλη το λιβάνι
κι η τρίτη η χοντρόκωλη, πάει να κάτσει απάνω.

troumpa_3

Η Επιστημη δεν εχει ορια, δεν εχει τερμα, δεν εχει πατο, δεν εχει ταβανι

Στη σελιδα “Πλινθοι και Κεραμοι“μπορεις αγαπητη αναγνωστρια να βρεις και αλλα αρθρα με επιστημονικο βαθος και συγκλονιστικη πρωτοτυπια.

Πηγες

1. Η Διαχρονικη Διαδρομη τηε Κανναβης. Ελευθερος Τυπος.

2. Η ελληνική πανσέληνος της κάνναβης. Το ΒΗΜΑ.

3. prkls

4. Τιποτα

5. Γ. Μπαμπινιωτη. Λεξικο της Νεας Ελληνικης Γλωσσας.

6. Η μαριχουανα του γιατρου μας ειναι η καλυτερη. Εφημεριδα των Συντακτων.

7. Μαρκος Βαμβακαρης. Αυτοβιογραφια. Εκδοσεις Παπαζηση. Αθηνα 1978.

8. Η πορεια της κανναβης και της απαγορευσης της. 

9. Ομιλία στο συνέδριο των ΥΠΕΞ – ΥΠ.ΥΓΕΙΑΣ – ΥΠ.ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗΣ (06/-3/2003)


Greater Amberjack Duo –Μαγιατικο εις Διπλουν

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fishdb-magiatiko

Today I proudly present one of my favourite fishes, the Greater Amberjack (Seriola dumerilli), cooked in two ways.

Amberjack thick slices

Amberjack thick slices

The first way is “boiled” in olive oil and vegetables.

The second way is grilled.

In both ways the fish must be sliced in thick slices. This is the key to the success of both ways. And the factor that requires cooking skills.

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Make sure there is no blood left in the flesh and that the spinal cord of the fish has been removed prior to cooking.

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The “boiled” way comes from the Greek islands. I present a variance of the traditional way.

Place a lot of olive oil in a deep pan and add cherry tomatoes, dry onions, and celery. Add coarse salt and pepper and bring to a moderate boil, in which tiny bubbles are formed but do not burst quickly. After most of the liquids have been evaporated, which will take approximately one hour, add the fish slices.

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Let the fish cook in the oil until it turns white. Do not turn. This should take approximatley one hour. While cooking, make sure that the bubbles remain very small and do not burst in quick succession.

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After the fish is cooked, remove from the pan and let it rest for thirty minutes. While the fish is resting, add zucchinis in the pan and cook for approximately half an hour.

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If you feel like it, you may add some thin pasta in the oil that has been infused with the fish and vegetable stock.

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If the fish is properly cooked, it is extremely soft and juicy. The low temperature has not hardened its flesh. For me it is one of the most original ways to cook fresh fish.

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On the other end of the temperature spectrum is the grill. The punishing heat is the greatest enemy of the fish. This is where the skill is required. To grill the thick slice of amberjack so that it is crusty on the outside and juicy and delicious on the inside. I add a little salt and pepper and coat the slice in olive oil prior to placing it on the ultra hot grill.

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Once the fish is cooked, remove from the grill and serve immediately.  Add a little bit of olive oil and a few drops of lemon. I am very careful with the lemon because it hardens the flesh and destroys the taste when used without moderation.

Enjoy both dishes with a robust white wine.


(Do not) Jump (off) from the Bridge

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We drink
We dry up
Then we crumble to dust

(Stuck between stations, The Hold Steady)

Washington Avenue Bridge Minneapolis

Washington Avenue Bridge Minneapolis

I like bridges.

I guess many people like bridges.

But people like bridges for different reasons.

Peter Stackpole; Oakland Bay Bridge

Peter Stackpole; Oakland Bay Bridge

I like bridges for aesthetic reasons.

I like the shapes, the arches, the materials.

Let me offer the example of Oakland’s Bay Bridge. 

Peter Stackpole; Oakland Bay Bridge

Peter Stackpole; Oakland Bay Bridge

“It took three years to build, cost more than $77m and 28 workmen lost their lives during its construction, but when it was finally completed in 1936, three years after work first began, Oakland Bay Bridge was the largest in the world, spanning some 7,180metres making it nearly 4.5 miles long. And these spectacular pictures charting the dramatic rise of the monolithic construction have gone on display for what is believed to be the first time since they were taken all those years ago. The images were were captured by a plucky young wannabe photographer who went by the name of Peter Stackpole.”

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2375145/Young-photographer-Peter-Stackpole-body-Bay-Bridge-work.html#ixzz2rKxlExg6

Peter Stackpole; Oakland Bay Bridge

Peter Stackpole; Oakland Bay Bridge

Other people like bridges for utilitarian reasons.

The Interstate 5 Bridge over the Columbia River in Oregon, USA

The Interstate 5 Bridge over the Columbia River in Oregon, USA

Bridges are practical.

They span two sides, so you can get across easily.

Other people see other utilities in bridges.

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One of them is jumping (off) from them.

As is the case with so many other human acts, there may be thousands, if not millions of reasons for jumping off a bridge.

(It might be better to talk instead of the intention behind the act.)

Serpentine River, London

Serpentine Lake, London

One such intention might be suicide.

If this is the intention, the actor (or agent as is the term in social sciences, or the patient as is the term in medicine and psychoanalysis) has to be careful to avoid running into a sign like the one in Serpentine in London: “Shallow Water. Do not jump from Bridge.”

When you are ready to do something that is difficult and requires extreme concentration and focus on the task, there is nothing worse than running into a warning sign that potentially puts you off.

In this way, the sign protects the innocent passers by, but also the aspiring suicidal ones. Ambivalence par excellence.

The sign does nothing for the accidental jumpers. Accidents do happen.

Entertainment-Photo-Person-jumping-off-bridge-on-bike-into-Seine

The cyclist who jumped off this bridge in the Seine did not read any signs, regardless of whether there were any.

I doubt whether his intention was suicide, it looks more like an extreme sports type of act, an attempt to tame fear and the elements, to pump adrenaline, to glorify the fearless actor, agent, patient.

Such an attempt may result in very unfortunate events for the jumper, but this is another story.

When you face glory and personal gratification to the extreme, consequences, or even the thought of them fades away.

Quezon Bridge Manila, Photo by Tunog Kanto

Quezon Bridge Manila, Photo by Tunog Kanto

What is critical is what the jumper has is in his or her mind when planning and carrying out the act.

The boy jumping off Quezon Bridge in Manila, photographed beautifuly by Tunog Kanto, looks like a determined winner, no matter what.

“It is all a mind game” as the old advert went.

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What a contrast to the previous picture of the man, winning!

A Reuters photo shows rescuers attempting to stop a man from committing suicide on a bridge in Wuhan, Hubei province, October 8, 2012. The man was rescued after he climbed onto the top of a bridge, attempting to jump off, over the Yangtze River and threatened his own life if his economic dispute could not be resolved.

Unfortunately this is not an uncommon incident.

In many countries, if not in all countries.

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“A woman is rescued from the Roaring Brook bridge by Scranton(Pennsylvania) emergency crews after she jumped off the bridge on the corner of Mattes Avenue and Cedar Avenue in South Scranton. Butch Comegys.”

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“The Scene At The Brooklyn Bridge This Morning, Where A Young Man Jumped To His Death”

dump truck crossing bridge

Some of the suicidal jumpers are rescued, some die.

The same may be the case with the “extreme sports” events.

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But the difference between the two cases could not have been any bigger.

The suicidal agent is immersed in the darkness of the upcoming finality of the act.

Whereas the glorious adventurous jumper is surrounded by Gods, albeit for a very short period of time.

Neither of the two will find the time to read the sign an the details of the City Order prohibiting the act of jumping.

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But it does not matter.

The people putting up signs continue doing their jobs, no matter what.

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Some do it in way that might be helpful to the suicidal agents.

“Sign on San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge – there is a phone below the sign that connects you to crisis counseling.” Photo taken by Jeremy Brann from USA.

But the Golden Gate Bridge in a magical way attracts suicides and has the world record of jumpers.

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John Bateson wrote in the Los Angeles Times:

“One reason the bridge has so many suicides is its magnetic appeal. Suicide sites tend to draw despairing people to them, and the numbers show that the Golden Gate Bridge exerts a stronger pull than anywhere else. Another reason may be the mistaken belief that jumping from the bridge results in a quick, near-certain death with no messy clean-up. In fact, 5% of jumpers survive the impact and subsequently drown, their bodies retrieved by Coast Guard crews. A handful survive — miraculously — but they usually suffer permanent physical injuries. A third reason is because access is easy. There are parking lots at both ends of the bridge and year-round walkways for pedestrians and bicyclists. One doesn’t need to procure a firearm, stockpile drugs or learn how to tie a noose. One just needs to go to the bridge and jump. The most important reason, though, is because the existing railing is only 4 feet high. Anyone can climb over it, from a 5-year-old girl — the bridge’s youngest official suicide — to people in their 80s.”

Early morning fog at the Golden Gate Bridge

Early morning fog at the Golden Gate Bridge

“The rail is so low, a 7-year-old can climb over it.” -Eric Steel.

“Inspired by a New Yorker story, Jumpers, written by Tad Friend, director Eric Steel decided to train cameras on the Golden Gate Bridge over the course of 2004 to capture the people who attempted to leap off the famed structure, the site of more suicides than anywhere else in the world. He also tracked down and interviewed the friends, family members, and eyewitnesses to further recreate the events leading up to the incident and to try to explain what led these people to want to kill themselves, especially at this specific site. The documentary’s primary subjects all struggled with mental illness, including severe depression, schizophrenia, and bipolar disorders, and the documentary struggles to understand their illness while illuminating the anger and hurt of their loved ones.” Top Documentary Films

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Sign on Seattle’s George Washington Memorial Bridge

From Seattle’s Washington Memorial Bridge I travel to Minneapolis.

As a student in this beautiful city, I used to cross the Washington Avenue Bridge every day to get from the west bank of the river to the east, where part of the university campus is.

Minneapolis, Washington Avenue Bridge 1885

Minneapolis, Washington Avenue Bridge 1885

On the morning of 7 January 1972, poet John Berryman jumped off the Washington Avenue Bridge in Minneapolis and killed himself.

Nick Cave in his song “We call upon the author (to explain)” refers to Berryman:

Bukowski was a jerk!
Berryman was best!
He wrote like wet papier-maché
But he went the Hemingway
Weirdly on wings and with maximum pain
We call upon the author to explain

Berryman never explained his suicide jump.

The Hold Steady in their song “Stuck between stations” pay hommage to John Berryman.

The devil and John Berryman
Took a walk together.
They ended up on Washington
Talking to the river.
He said “I’ve surrounded myself with doctors
And deep thinkers.
But big heads with soft bodies
Make for lousy lovers.”
There was that night that we thought John Berryman could fly.
But he didn’t
So he died.
She said “You’re pretty good with words
But words won’t save your life.”
And they didn’t.
So he died.

He was drunk and exhausted but he was critically acclaimed and respected.
He loved the Golden Gophers but he hated all the drawn out winters.
He likes the warm feeling but he’s tired of all the dehydration
Most nights were kind of fuzzy
But that last night he had total retention.

These Twin Cities kisses
Sound like clicks and hisses.
We all tumbled down and
Drowned in the Mississippi River.

We drink
We dry up
Then we crumble to dust


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