Sunday, February 21, 2010

Napoli!

I have to say, I didn't know what to expect for my weekend in Naples. My professor warned us about the poverty and 40% unemployment rate that plays a huge part in the character of the city. The best thieves can steal the earrings right off your ears if you're not alert. Most people have ties to the mob (The Camorra. The Mafia is Sicilian fyi) so that they can have some sort of income. With all of that on my mind I was actually curious to see the city. It couldn't be terribly unsafe (i.e. South Philly or Kensington unsafe) or the professor wouldn't have arranged the field trip. So I brought the bare minimum, hide my money the best ways I could, and was ready to take on Napoli...

We arrive at the Capodimonte Museum first. We took a rented coach bus so that we wouldn't have to worry about public transportation while we were there and it was great to have, honestly. The museum was originally a palace and it was HUGE. It was such a well organized museum. I really enjoyed it.



It was raining like crazy when we got there so I actually stole this off google. But it's a way bette picture than what I could have taken. We got to see Caravaggio's "Flagellation" and an Artemisia Gentileschi! Which was exciting for me since she's one of my favorite female artists.

After the museum we headed to Certosa di San Martino, which is a former monastery complex of the Carthusian monks. We had to go on a inclining metro type tram that took us up to the top of the hill. The area up here is much nicer and cleaner. This is where the upper class had moved years and years ago to get away from the crime-ridden dankness of the lower streets in Naples. It's still a nice area for upper middle class residence.



These outside escalators were very useful for getting up the rest of the way to the monastery.



View from top of the hill.



The white building at the bottom of the hill on the right is the monastery. To the left is the most beautiful view of Naples.







There's a black cat hanging out on the side. Unfortunately there is graffiti all over Naples..

Inside the monastery there is also a view of the Bay of Naples







Naples streets as it starts to get dark

After the monastery we walked back to our hotel. Everyone had different sized room. Kate and I lucked out with ours!









For dinner we went to a restaurant across the street from the hotel, it was literally a hole in the wall type of joint by I felt like I got a true Neapolitan experience that way. And the guy that took our order and waited on us was such a character. He was singing and dancing and had such a personality. And of course he didn't speak any english and used a lot of Neapolitan dialect so it was hard for me to even pick up what he was saying. But I really enjoyed dinner that night. haha





This was my appetizer. Neapolitan food is famous for their fried foods and pizza. This is a mixed plate of fried stuff. Fried mozzarella (REAL mozzarella, from buffalo's milk that must be made that day), fried potato (this is unbelievably good), fried ricotta cheese (that might have been my favorite), and seaweed which seemed like it was wrapped around bread or something but I really enjoyed it!



My main course was gnocchi with red sauce and lots of cheese! Also very good.

After dinner we went back to the hotel and crashed for a good 9 hours because Saturday was packed with lots of things to do.

For breakfast, we had a another great buffet like in Milan and this time I got a lovely view of Naples while eating my cereal and croissant.



After breakfast we headed to the Cathedral of San Gennaro to look at some frescos. Interesting background of this church and San Gennaro - not too long ago the Catholic church demoted San Gennaro as a saint because there was too much controversy over whether or not his miracles were true. Apparently the church has been cracking down on the saints to see who's stories are too far fetched for believers in the 21st century with all the technological and scientific advantages it's pushing the church to get reevaluate some of their past. Saint Gennaro was a bishop and maryred by being thrown into an oven to be cooked to a crisp. When they opened the oven he walked out unharmed. Then they threw him into an amphitheater to be eaten by wild animals but he calmed them . So they finally decapitated him. A man who was healed by San Gennaro collected viles of blood supposedly from the saint after he was martyred and they are now relics o the church along with his skull. They keep them in the treasury behind the alter and bring them out three times a year to shake the viles to see if the blood will liquify. This then is a good omen for the people of Naples. If the blood stays congealed, the Neapolitans will will SPIT on it until it does. That kind of gives you a taste of the Neapolitan people. But after the blood liquifies, which is almost always does, people will come up and kiss the viles of blood. Interesting story, right?

After San Gennaro, we walked to Pio Monte della Misericordia, which is a round church on the inside that houses Caravaggio's "7 Acts of Mercy". We weren't suppose to take pictures here, just like everywhere else we went to, but I snuck one!!





The church was down this street, or at least a street just like it.

After that, we took a little walking tour of Spaccanapoli, which is the ancient quarter with a long narrow street splitting Naples in half)



We walked to the San Gregorio Armeno district where they make the famous handcrafted nativity scenes that Naples is popular for and people come from all over the world near Christmas time to buy from this area.







This is Tombola. It's an Italian bingo-like game that's often played during christmas time. Neapolitans are incredibly superstitious as well and numbers have meanings to them, so they play the lottery a ton in Naples. If they have a dream they'll look up the number that represents something in their dream and play it, hoping it was a sign that it will bring them the winning ticket. Another Neapolitan quirk is their fear of the evil eye. Our professor told us that he husband, who is a Neapolitan, will never say he is doing good when asked how he is. He'll just say not bad. This is because if things are good or you tell others how great life is going for you right now they may envy your good fortune and curse you with the evil eye. In order to protect yourself, you are suppose to wear or have hanging somewhere a horn. But you can't buy one for yourself. It has to be given to you as a gift in order to work. You see them all over the place where they sell handcrafted things. They look like hot peppers though since they paint them red and give only a slight curve to them. But I thought that was an interesting Neapolitan tid bit.







Pastries!!

So after we walked around for a bit and stopped by another church it was time for lunch! Finally, real Neapolitan pizza!



Our professor took us to one of the best pizza places in Naples: Sorbillo. It's second only to the place mentioned in Eat, Pray, and Love. Both are very well known and have english written on the menu (yay!) so it took a while to get in but once we did I knew I was in for the biggest individual pizza of my life when I saw other people's plate. They are GIGANTIC pizzas!







All of this for 3.30 euro!! Soooo cheap!



Yes I DID eat nearly the whole thing! It was hands down the best pizza of a life time. I'll never be able to eat pizza in the states again.

After dinner we walked around a bit more and saw several different monuments, my favorite was getting to see Giuseppe San Martino's "Veiled Christ" that he sculpted in the mid 1700's. It was unbelievably life-like. I felt like I could lift the veil right off Christ's Body and he's be underneath. It was so incredible how accurate the anatomy was and the veins of his feet and hands through the veil. Very happy we got to see that. That was actually in a small church that isn't used as a church anymore, and down below you can see the strangest science experiment done also in the 1700's by, I believe it was an upper class man or maybe a prince who collaborated with a scientist and figured out a way to inject corpses with a substance that would keep arteries and veins from decomposing to people could study the circulatory system of our bodies. And the two corpses that they first tried this one are on display in this church. It's kind of like a precursor of Body Worlds, if you've ever heard of it. If not, I suggest you google it.

After that we had a bit of free time before out bus came to whisk us back to Rome. A bunch of us decided to walk down to the bay one last time to watch the sunset. It was really WINDY walking down there and a bit chilly. But very worth it.





Mt. Vesuvius





I look terrible but that's Mt. Vesuvius behind me.



On our way back to the bus the sun finally set and made the most amazing burst of color over the horizon





It was amazing to see the same bright sky that the fresco painters must have seen when doing their dome ceilings in all the cathedrals I've seen. These pictures really don't do it justice. It was really breathtaking.

So that was my two day adventure in Napoli! I wish I could have spent another day to see the archeological museum and a few other places. But I'm glad I got to go with my professor who knows the city very well and had interesting little side comments about places and things. It was an experience above and beyond my expectations and made me really love Naples!

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Tunisia Itinerary

So I'm sure most of you are quite curious to know what in the world I'll be up to while in Tunisia for spring break. And let me tell you, it's A LOT! I figured it would be a good idea to share with you guys my Tunisian Itinerary so you can kind of following along with me during that week because I won't have a computer to keep you updated while I'm off riding camels. So here's the skinny on what to expect:

Friday, Feb. 26
Meet at Fiumicino Airport at 7:45am for check-in
Depart on Tunisair flight #753 at 11:05am
Arrive in Tunis/Carthage at 12:20pm
Bus to Medina of Tunis for visit
Depart for Sousse
Arrive at Hotel El Hana Palace
Dinner in Hotel

Saturday, Feb. 27
Breakfast in hotel at 6:30am. Depart at 7am
Visit El Gem
Coffee break in Mahres
Free Lunch!
Trip to Djerba (This is the Island of the Lotus Eaters in the Odyssey!!)
Visit Guellala, Ghriba synagogue, and Houmt Souk
Dinner in hotel

Sunday, Feb. 28
Breakfast at 7am. Depart at 7:30am
Visit Matmata. See a troglodyte house
View of lunar landscape
Lunch
Depart for Douz
Arrive at Hotel Sahara Douz
Optional Desert Excursion (which I'm doing!!) Depart at 3pm
- Arrive to camp site by dromedaries (one hump animal, not a camel exactly)
- Sunset on Sahara dunes
-Traditional Tunisian dinner cooked over open fire
- Folkloristic music
- Star-watching
- Sleeping in large tents w/ mattresses, pillows, etc.
- Sunrise of the Sahara Dunes
- Breakfast
- Departure back to Douz on dromedaries

Monday, March 1
Morning we have free time to either shop or sleep some more after desert excursion
Free Lunch!
Afternoon visit to Souk, Sabria and El Faouar
Dinner in hotel

Tuesday, March 2
Breakfast at 6am
Departure at 6:30am for Chott el-Jerid (6,000 year old salt lake)
Continue to Tozeur
Visit with university students that our professor also teaches. (She flies back and forth from Italy to Tunisia)
Horse and carriage ride in date palm oasis
Free Lunch!
Excursion in 4x4's to visit mountain oasis (Chebika, Tamerza, and Mides)
Return to Douz
Dinner at hotel

Wednesday, March 3
Breakfast at 5am, Departure at 5:30am
Visit various monuments in Monastir
Free Lunch!
Continue to Sousse
Arrive at Hotel El Hana Palace
Dinner in hotel

Thursday, March 4
Breakfast 6:30am. Depart for Tunis at 7am
Visit the ruins of Carthage and American cemetery, and the village of Sidi Bou Said
Free Lunch!
Bus to airport at 2pm
Depart for Rome on Tunisair flight #852 at 4:45pm
Arrive in Fiumicino airport at 6pm

The 5:30 departure day is going to kill me but it will be worth it. haha. I'm not a Stars Wars fan at all but I'm sure those of you who know it might recognize the name of the city or place that some of it was filmed at. I think it's at the end of the trip. So I guess it would be beneficial for me to download whatever one I need to and watch it so it at least makes sense to me while i'm there. I'm hoping I have enough memory on my camera because I would love to take videos of the desert excursion and maybe other places if they allow it. Our professor told us to be respectful about how they generally don't like their picture taken and it's best to always ask first. There are also some places that will let you take pictures as long as you pay. But it's very cheap there so it would be worth it since you get several places included and you only pay maybe 2 dinars, which is their currency. Apparently 1 dinar = .53 cents in euros. Which is like... 73 cents in dollars if I'm going by a .39 cent exchange rate. I forgot what the exchange rate is but I heard it's down in the 30's which is great if it's true.

Anyway so I have a lot o prepping to do to get ready. I think I want to buy a small backpack for the desert excursion which might also be helpful for future weekend trips with my classes. Our professor gave us a list of things to pack for the trip as a whole and for the desert, so at least it won't be a total guessing game. I can't wait for midterms to be over and to be in Tunisia! I really wish I brought another memory stick... Perhaps I'll try to pick one up tomorrow.

Ciao a tutti!

Monday, February 15, 2010

Milano!

This past weekend I was in Milan with my Inside Italian Design class. I really wasn't sure what to expect since the class itself bores me to tears. But I ended up having a really great time. We left Termini station at 8am on friday and got to Milan a little after 11am. I slept until the last half hour or so, mostly because the teacher decided to sit next to me. Story of my life. The seats were comfortable and you're grouped in fours and have a table in the middle. You can also reserve a whole cabin in a car if you have enough people. Think Harry Potter and the scary Grim Reaper things floating outside the train.

Anyway, so once we got there we had to drag out stuff to our first visit - the studio of the late Achille Castiglioni who was a renowned industrial designer. His daughter, Giovanna, gave us the tour to his studio and told us funny little jokes about him and her childhood. We also got to meet his wife, I think her name is Irma. I don't know if she speaks english but she seemed really nice and smiled and laughed while saying what I have no idea. We we're aloud to take pictures but it was just a 3 or 4 room studio with very high ceilings and he was a very well organized person who had everything catalogued and documented. It was really impressive. Currently they're trying to digitalize everything so people can pull documents and sketches from an online database to learn about his technique, etc. So right off the bat I was really excited about seeing more of Milan and meeting these people I would normally never meet if I went on my own.

That took about an hour. Then we check into our hotel - Hotel Palazzo delle Stelline. The lobby was pretty ugly but the place was really nice and the beds were a little softer then the ones in our flat in Rome and they had the HEAT on in the morning! It was so nice to wake up and not mind rolling out of bed because it wasn't freezing. haha. Anyway here are some pix of my roommate Ashley and I's room - 216 (duecento sedici in italiano)











We got some lunch down the street at a bar called Bar Magenta. I got a panini and realized I got it with Anchovies... It is true to what people say, they are strongly flavored and salty! Luckily that was the only slight disaster in the food department. The food we ate while in Milan was absolutely amazing!

After lunch we went to Michele de Lucchi's Studio. We were taken around by one of the architects that works there. There are 25 architects that work there, split up into 3 groups who all work on various projects, 5 interior designers, and 5 graphic designers. The interior decor of the studio is unfinished wood, which as I understood it, is the sort of idea behind the concept of Michele de Lucci's style. We took a mini tour of the facilities. They have a really small woodshop downstairs where they make miniature proposed building designs. The ground floor is the reception area and a little metting room. The second floor is the architect floor, and the 3rd floor is the graphic and interior designers plus the purchaser. And incase anyone is wondering who has also worked in the manufacturing field, the purchaser also yells and takes multiple calls at once just like the good 'ol USA. So the next time you have a bad day at work, just think that someone who has the same job as you in Milan is already 6 hours deep into that same bad day. Here is some pictures from Michele de Lucch's Studio:





Building model they were working on down in the woodshop



They have an elevator! But we used the stairs.



Reception area



Third floor work area.



Looking down onto the second floor. Both floors looked pretty similar.



The architect tour guy on the left, and my professor on the right. He was kind of hard to understand and seemed to just talk to the professor and never waited for all of us to get into a room, if we could ever fit into an area. It was an interesting place to see but our group was a little too big and my professor has a VERY ANNOYING habit of cutting people off when they talk and talking over them and not being polite and letting them finish. To say she's controlling is an understatement.

After Michele de Lucci's studio we went to Dilmos in Brera which is a very high end furniture store to look at the current trends in furniture design. We had an assignment to do while we were there to find out designers of a piece and ask for the price and what the material is and all that. So for anyone curious to know about the hot new trends in furniture and interior design, keep reading:



I thought this was quite interesting...



I actually loved this as possibly salon furniture. I liked the mirror effect.



Alasdhair Willis (Stella McCartney's hubby) apparently designed this light fixture.





There was also a chair made out of stuffed animals. And it was very expensive I remember. Why, I don't know.

After lounging around on 60,000 euro chairs and couches we had free time to do whatever we wanted. We decided to walk around and see what kind of shopping there was (It was all waaaaay too expensive). The streets are very pretty though. It was a nice area.











Window shopping was about all we could afford.

We went back to the hotel and took a power nap before heading out to dinner. We decided to take our Professor's recommendation and headed to Ristorante Bebel. It was one of the best meals I've had so far. Very god, and very authentic. There were Italian families everywhere and no sight of tourists anywhere. I had the spaghetti carbonara and it was very very good. There was 6 of us and for dessert we decided to buy two things and split them. I can't remember what they were but one was like a chocolate mouse cake and the other was a fantastic, almost creme brulee tasting dessert which reminded me of Paris a little.

The next morning we had breakfast courtesy of of the hotel and it was a buffet style and perfectly filling. I had cereal, banana, croissant, and a chocolate chip cupcake thing. I took an apple with me incase I needed a snack later.

We went to a billon showrooms on this day so I might miss some or put them out of order. FYI. So there was a showroom that was really cool called Cassina, apparently the biggest and most renowned in the furniture world. So again I sat on thousands on euros worth of furniture and considered its design. Actually I mostly just sat around and did less of the thinking part.



These are vases and seem to be quite popular at the moment. They're made out of silicone so they're unbreakable. Only 500 euros. I'm sure you could scrounge that up from the change between your couch cushions.



If you think this is some kind of furniture....



You'd be right. I think they call it the grass chair/couch.... Not exactly comfortable.



The entrance to Artemide was really fun to walk through. It was a lighting store. Also expensive, of course.



I LOVED this little set up in the front of the Venini glass store! I love chandeliers and victorian styled furniture and I just love this photo! haha.



These were also in Venini and I loved the idea.

For lunch we went to a place that I can't remember the name to but it was a huge buffet style and you could pick whatever you wanted and put it on a lunch tray just like you were at high school all over again. I got risotto and for dessert chocolate salami! The risotto was really good but it was too much! I couldn't eat it all. The chocloate salami wasn't actually salami, just a chocolate cookie with white pieces in it that made it look like salami. It was really really good too. It was another great place that our professor recommended.

We went to a ton of places, like I said, but I couldn't take as many pictures as I wanted because my battery was super low and although I brought the charger I forgot to bring the adapter/converter. So unfortunately my camera dies later on this day at...



The Duomo! Which is the Milan Cathedral. It was absolutely breathtaking to see and my camera literally dies while I'm standing on top of it. But luckily I can fill in with pictures that my roommate Ashley took with her camera.



On the lower level of the roof, looking at the Piazza below.





Walkway on the side roof.



This is the stairway up to the top of the roof.



It was HUGE! Thank god we had such nice weather. It was clear skies and fairly warm.



And this is the last picture my camera took before it crapped out. Apparently they say you can see the alps if it's clear skies. Which it was but all we could see was smog.



My roommate took this with her camera. I thought it was such a pretty shot.

So after we started heading down there was a man who was walking around asking if everyone got to go to the top yet because it closes at sunset. So we just made it in time. The inside of the church was amazing. No photos were a loud even though everyone was taking them. But it was so dark in there they weren't turning out so good so if you're curious just google Milano Cathedral or duomo and it should show up. Just make sure it's Milan.

I was happy to see that there was a place to light candles in this cathedral. So I bought one for Greg and put it under Mary and the Christ Child.







There was a service going on as we walked around inside the church. It was really one of the prettiest churches I've ever seen. I was really happy I was able to go there.

After visiting the church, Ashley and I tried to catch up with the friends we were with on top of the roof but could't find them after searching all 8 or 9 floors of the huge shopping center, La Rinascente. It was the first shopping center in Milan and maybe even Italy i think. We were on the prada, gucci, valentino side. Later we found the cheaper stuff after we ran into four girls from our class and kind of invited ourselves into their pack. haha. It was a lot of fun and later we all went out together for dinner. We actually ended up at a Chinese food place and I normally never eat Chinese food but it was interesting for me to see all the dishes that people got. I, of course, stuck to the wong tong soup. After dinner got some drinks at Bar Magenta. I got a really great after dinner drink called Grass Hopper. It had a creamy minty flavor. Heineken PR's came around with green dyed roses for all the women in the bar and we toasted at midnight for Valentines Day. Which never really felt like Valentines Day but I'll take a free rose any day.

The next day we check out of our hotel around 10:30am and went to a museum that had a couple of exhibits.... it was really boring and not worth me blogging about. The one exhibit was entirely in Italian so I don't even know what I paid for to see. Ridiculous. Afterward we had free time for lunch so a couple people ate at a Carnival that was going on and I went with another girl to Bar Magenta and ended up catching up a bunch of people there. I had Lasagna that was absolutely wonderful and very filling. After that we headed to the train and I got home a little after 7:30pm. I honestly thought I'd be more exhausted but I guess having on-site lectures 3 times a week and always feeling like I'm on the go made it less draining I guess.

Oh, and if you're wonder, yes there are lots and lots of expensive cars all over the place. I've never heard a Ferrari start up in person and it was interesting to hear it and see it but by no means was I terribly interested in all the boasting that was clearly being ton by such people. Not everyone is dressed to the nines though. But they're certainly is a level of luxury hanging out on the streets in and around Piazza Babila and all along there and the duomo. I'd definitely go back one day to check out more places. We didn't have a lot of free time but I'm glad I got to see the duomo and look around at the stores.

Next week is Naples! Only a 2 day trip though. And we've been warned at how serious the poverty is and how bad pick-pocketing is compared to the rest of Italy. She told us not to bring anything that we would be upset losing. Including earrings!!! The craftiest pick-pocketers apparently lurk where we are going. Great.

Until then....