Wednesday, 26 August 2015

Hallstatt : stuck to the mountains and lying at a beautiful lake in the south of Salzkammergut, Austria.



The name of the village is linked to Celtic and Pre-Illyrian peoples in Early Iron Age Europe, circa 800 - 400 BC.

Hallstatt means "estate of the salt chamber" and you can visit the historical salt mines and the Cultural Heritage Museum that hold the history of Hallstattersee.


Hallstätter See.


At the end of the 19th century you still had to take a boat or hike difficult mountain trails in order to arrive at Hallstatt.

Even in summer the lake remains a bit chilly for swimming. But you always can enjoy (especially on a rainy day) the arctic char, grayling, eel, carp and different sorts of white fish and trouts in one of the local restaurants.


It's not always as romantic as these pictures promise. From about mid-november until february the inhabitants of Hallstatt don't see the sun.

Around Hallstatt you will find some of the best hiking trails in Salzkammergut and you will be able to shoot some of the most spectacular pics in the mountain and lake scenery.








Tuesday, 25 August 2015

This mosaic necklace is just a one-off.




I admit it was a complicated job to achieve this one. It took me four days to make it.

Looking at the original and wonderful beauty of it, I believe it was worth the hard work.






Composition : small pockets of cotton-filled fabric, round beads lined with satin, black flowers of synthetic leather and some beads of different colours and sizes.

Nothwithstanding the variety, the harmony of the collar is outmatching. Looking at some photos of roman mosaics, the concept occurred to me.

First I made a bottom piece of crochet giving it more bandwidth at the centre.
Next I was patiently cutting the fabrics and once sewn, I filled them with cotton.
Finally I started the assembly.




Good heavens ! It took me quite a number of stitches and hours.

This adornment around your neck will make you feel truly unique.

Click here for more information or to buy this mosaic collar.

Click here to discover other creations in my Etsy shop.




Tuesday, 18 August 2015

Ghost town Craco, Province of Matera, Southern Italian region of Basilicata


Known as Graculum in Ancient Rome.

The town was built on a very steep summit for defensive reasons, but it was abandoned due to natural disasters.




Because of its unique and particular landscape Craco has been the setting of many movies.

Among many others "The Passion of the Christ" (2004) by Mel Gibson. The town appears in the scene of the hanging of Judas.

Before, in 1996, it was chosen for the film "The Nymph", directed by Lina Wertmüller and with music by the unforgettable Ennio Morricone.






Friday, 14 August 2015

Danza dos Cobres (Santo Adrán), Vilaboa, Pontevedra, Galicia, Spain.





The origins of this local tradition date back to the eighteenth century.

"Madamas, galáns and aldeáns" represent different social roles and economic positions.
The Galáns & the madamas occupy the highest ones.

The majority group, the aldeáns, represent the last link in the chain.










Each year sequins, ribbons, feathers and other decorations have to be renewed as they get lost during the dancing and the festivities.







See it live on this video :



Tuesday, 4 August 2015

Has your perception of love ever deceived you ?

No doubt love occupied a central stage at several moments in your life. Perhaps the lack of it did.
In our quest for love we can be faced with hope, doubt, excitement, rejection, passion, wrong assumptions, idolization, sadness.

Where and how do we search for love ? It seems to me a primordial question. Or do we think we have to be lucky ? If so, our chances are perhaps not bigger than in the lottery.

Erich Fromm (1900-1980) is an internationally renowned German American psychologist.
Although he grew up  in an orthodox Jewish family, he later chose a humanistic philosophy of life.
He emigrated in 1934 to New York because of the rise of national socialism in Germany.
In 1950 he moved to Mexico, where he would spend most of his life. The last six years he spend in Ticino in Switserland.

Already his interpretation of the story of Adam and Eva is very interesting. Erich Fromm knew very well the Talmud (he had also several rabbis in the family) and he came up with a new interpretation.
In Jewish tradition the Tree of Knowledge and the eating of its fruit represents the beginning of the mixture of good and evil together.

In catholic education I learned that Adam and Eve sinned by disobeying God.
Augustine later said that eating the fruit was not sinful. The fruit was created by God and thus good.
But the authority (in this case God) had told them not to eat the fruit and thus the sin was to disobey the authority.

If I understand Erich Fromm well, Adam and Eve started to develop their own moral values by taking independent action. They felt naked, ashamed and they had existential angst.
Conscious of themselves they were now confronted with a looming death in the future. They were however "free".

Fromm believed that freedom was an aspect of human nature that we either embrace or escape.
I think freedom of will is incredibly healthy for a human being. Without it the value of your possibilities are shrinking considerably.

If you have to obey to a dictator (such as Hitler, Isis, Pol Pot), you no longer control yourself, the dictator does. Your choices are very limited, at best. The authoritarian force can also be a father or  a mother, a brother or a sister, a husband or a wife and in our modern indulgent times our own children or grandchildren. Love can be far away in the family, even if the family members claim they love one another.

Another way of loosing your freedom is by living through the eyes of other people. You then replace your own ideals and dreams by the perception the society has as it should be. You lose yourself in the process. You no longer behave, think or speak as you wish. Your first goal is that others will like you or that you will impress them. The further you go in that direction the more you can lose yourself.
This applies to different levels of our society (work, love relationships, communities).

Eliminate other people is of course the most obvious way of escaping freedom.
"The destruction of the world is the last, almost desperate attempt to save myself from being crashed by it" (= quote by Erich Fromm).

In 1956 he published "The art of loving".  You can't become a master at playing the violin overnight.
The same applies to love. True humility, courage, faith and discipline are required to obtain satisfaction in love.
Those qualities do not abound in our modern society. Therefore the attainment of the capacity to love must remain a rare achievement. Or, anyone can ask himself how many truly loving persons he has known ?

It seems to me if you do not love yourself, you are also doomed never to be loved by another one.
If you don't love your proper values, moral attitudes or if you hardly believe in yourself, how can you expect another person to love you ?