Friday, October 26, 2012

Roman Weekend

I'm finally done with midterms - now it's time to relax and recap the last week! Last Friday I trekked to Rome with my High Renaissance Art History class. We had three full 12 hour days of seeing art, going to churches, museums, villas, and seeing everything else Rome has to offer. When I say there is very little of Rome we didn't see on this trip, I am not exaggerating.. Our professor had us speed walking everywhere, barely having time to stop for bathroom breaks or for lunch. A lot of what we saw I had seen when I was in Rome with my mom last summer, so it was especially fun to revisit those places.

I was so excited that I got to see the Vatican museums and the Sistine Chapel for a second time, as well as one of my favorite museums, the Borghese Gallery, with its beautiful green gardens surrounding the villa. The Bernini sculptures in the Borghese are some of my favorite art works of all time, especially his Apollo and Daphne piece. On Saturday night we went out to an amazing restaurant near our hotel in the Campo dei Fiori, where Caesar was supposedly assassinated.. I had a pear and pistachio ravioli that was absolutely incredible. For dessert we had the house special, Nutella tiramisu... enough said. It was to die for.

Here are some pictures that can better describe what we did and everything we saw:






The Italian Flag - abstract?

Belvedere Torso

Spanish Steps at Night

Villa d'Este




Hadrian's Villa

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Bologna

One of my favorite things about my on-site High Renaissance art history class is that I get to go on weekend day trips to cities around Italy, and experience the best of Italy the way it should be done. We left my new home and the capital of Tuscany for Bologna, the capital of the Emilia-Romagna region, bright and early at 7 am. After driving north for only a little over an hour we arrived in Bologna and began our day of church going, sightseeing, art appreciating, and of course, eating.

It was way less touristy than other cities I've been to in Italy like Pisa and Florence for example, which made it feel more relaxed and local. We went into just about every church and museum in the whole city, as is the norm with my all-knowing art history professor, Helen. On another note, I'm going to Rome with this same class (taught by Helen) next weekend and I am anticipating the most intense weekend of art and sightseeing of my life.

For lunch we went to a small local restaurant where I ordered Bologna's specialty dish, tortellini; prepared in the chef's chosen house special. It was beyond delicious and consisted of fresh homemade tortellini pasta stuffed with spinach and ricotta cheese, in a mushroom cream sauce with ham. I have been absolutely loving going to different regions of Italy and trying their local specialty, and I can't help but keep thinking that am I living the good life or what?! After visiting a few more churches we got gelato for dinner and headed back home to Florence. I promise I'll write more about the amazing art we saw later, but reminiscing about that tortellini made me hungry so I think I'll go make some dinner...





Jessica in her natural habitat - drawing away!








Tomb, a few of the small statues are by Michelangelo

Friday, October 12, 2012

Salvatore Ferragamo and Marilyn Monroe

I am absolutely loving my Italian Fashion Design class here in Florence. Yesterday we visited the Salvatore Ferragamo Museum which is housed beneath the Salvatore Ferragamo store on what can only be described as the Fifth Avenue of Florence. Ferragamo was born in Naples and became a gifted shoe designer and maker by the age of eleven. Ferragamo studied the anatomy of the foot and once he realized the weight of the body was supported mostly by the arch of the foot, he designed and patented an ingenious shoe structure with a steel rod between the soles which would reinforce and support the weight of the body.

He then moved to Hollywood where he became the shoe designer to the stars; including Audrey Hepburn, Judy Garland, and Marilyn Monroe. He was so precise in the creation of his shoes that he would cast the foot of each client in order to ensure a perfect fit. When he was hired to make a pair of shoes whether they were for an actress, member of a royal family, or just a wealthy woman, he would always create two pairs of the exact same shoe; one for the client, and one to keep for himself. Thus in his archives remained some fourteen thousand pairs of shoes, which his children arranged to have displayed in what is now the Salvatore Ferragamo Museum. He was truly ahead of his time in his shoe designs and creations. He created the first cork wedge, the first shoes to have color other than brown or black, as well as the first platform shoes.

In the museum they have an exhibition space that changes every couple of months. It just so happens that right now there is a Marilyn Monroe exhibit, which was really powerful. Although Ferragamo never met Marilyn, she was a consistent buyer of his shoes and would always get the exact same pair; a simple but sexy pump, in many different colors. The exhibit displayed images of Marilyn throughout her life and career; from her beginnings in Playboy and as a model, to her movies and personal life as well as her emotional instability.

The beginning of the exhibit consisted of a round room with images and videos of Marilyn during her peak of fame, surrounded by a large atomic bomb shaped disco ball; comparing her life and career to that of the effect of an atomic bomb, forever lasting and seemingly unavoidable. From there the exhibit went on to compare Marilyn's beauty to that of sculptures from antiquity, as well as High Renaissance paintings like Botticelli's Birth of Venus. She supposedly studied the likeness of historical representations of beauty, and sought to recreate a similarly classical and everlasting impression of herself. A more disturbing room followed which was dedicated to her death, or apparent suicide.

The final room of the exhibit had a large screen playing highlights from her movies, surrounded by many of her most famous cinematic costumes; including the pink satin dress that she wore while singing "Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend," in the 1953 film "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes," as well as the infamous ivory pleated dress from her 1955 film "The Seven Year Itch," among many others. I absolutely loved seeing all of her costumes up close and not separated from the public by a glass wall; a metaphor of the more intimate way in which the entire exhibition was set up to expose the life of Marilyn.

Although I've been told it was a more controversial exhibit than the city of Florence wanted, I found it tragic yet inspiring and I'm so glad I got a chance to see it.


Shoe designed for Audrey Hepburn by Salvatore Ferragamo





A classic Marilyn pose and sculptures from antiquity - a juxtaposition







Tuesday, October 9, 2012

CROATIA

Ah, Croatia. My roommate Abbey and I decided last Thursday that we wanted to go somewhere for the weekend. The problem? We couldn't decide between Italy's Amalfi Coast and the beaches of Croatia. Hard life right? We decided on Croatia and booked our weekend with bus2alps, the same tour group that I traveled to Cinque Terre with a few weekends ago. We began our weekend with a 12 hour bus ride overnight on Thursday; arriving in the port town of Split, Croatia at about 8 am Friday morning. We checked into our hostel with the other study abroad students, had a free breakfast (with big, real cups of coffee!) and went out to explore Split. We decided on a day at the beach followed by shopping and a delicious seafood dinner by the water. I decided on a delicious risotto with zucchini and scampi and a small Croatian beer that I can't pronounce the name of. After dinner we wandered around Split, and the ancient Roman Palace of Emperor Diocletian.

Saturday we signed up for an island hopping excursion that included lunch on the boat, and a full day of sun. We sailed two hours away from Split to the small and barely inhabited island of Brac. We ate full bone fish while docked in the harbor and when we were done, jumped off the top of the boat into the crystal clear turquoise water. We sailed around to the other side of Brac where a private beach was awaiting us. We swam and laid out in the sun on the white rock covered beach, sipping Croatian lemon beer and wishing we could never leave. That night we took a 30 minute bus ride to Trogir (another port town) for dinner where I had one of the most delicious margherita pizzas of my life.

Sunday morning we headed off to Krka National Park, two hours from Split, but closer to our eventual destination back to Florence. We walked around and explored the waterfalls, enjoying the green wilderness before our return to Italy and city life. I had a delicious fish soup at the base of the large waterfall, followed by some candied almonds for dessert. After another very long bus ride, we arrived back in Florence and to our semi-real life (because even after a weekend in paradise, I still live in the amazingly beautiful city of Florence!). More adventures to come: this Saturday I have a field trip to Bologna with my High Renaissance art history class, and on Sunday a day trip to Mantua!

Port of Split, Croatia

Fish Market in Split



Brac Island


Yes, I ate the whole thing, and it was delicious!


Krka National Park