main index © Jeff Matthews
2002-2012
Naples Miscellany 24 (start early August 2009)
Rifiuti in cerca d'autore
["Garbage in search of an author"] is a pun on the
title of the play by Luigi Pirandello, Sei personaggi in
cerca d'autore, but for our purposes it's
the name of an International Competition for Art
& Design (2nd edition) sponsored by the
organization Salerno
in Arte. The competition seeks to stimulate
imaginative and creative approaches to dealing with
the never-ending crisis of garbage, rubbish, trash,
waste or whatever you call it where you live. The
competition runs through mid-October, at which time
40 finalists will be selected by Ecomondo in Rimini
(nowhere near Salerno!). If you need help, the photo
that accompanies this item is by Andrea Petrone and
was part of the preview of the first competition
last year. It shows famous Neapolitan comic, Totò being bombarded
by trash erupting from Mt. Vesuvius.
- Gallery Napoli nobilissima
is one of the many art galleries in Naples that sort
of doubles as a museum/exhibition hall. The gallery
takes its name from a cultural
journal founded by Benedetto
Croce and was founded in 1969 in the heart of
the historic center and moved to its current
premises at Piazza Vittoria in 1985. It underwent
extensive renovation in February 2009. Currently on
display and running through the end of September is
an exhibit entitled Oltre il mare [Beyond the Sea],
divided into four sections: The Wonders of the Sea,
The Sea that
Watches, The
Myths of the Sea and Man and the Sea.
The works cover centuries of art, from Baroque masters such
as Luca Giordano,
Paolo de Matteis and Salvator Rosa
to the present.
- The Cerio museum
on Capri is running a
display through September that covers "everything"!
They're not kidding: Greek and Roman archaeological
sites, geology of the island, paleontology
(featuring coral fossils and mammoth elephant
bones), pre- and protohistory (early human
artifacts), and unique zoology (the blue lizards of
the Faraglioni, rare sea shells, etc.) The say the
guided tour lasts only 30 minutes. I don't
understand that. Best to call ahead: 081.8376681.
- Volkswagen
is here. Whoopee. The German car manufacturer is
sending its "Polo Dance Tour" around various
metropolitan centers in Italy in order to advertise
the new VW Polo. Somehow, people in the Campania
region were afraid they were going to be snubbed and
left out in the bitter No-Polo-Dance-Tour
wilderness, but, hallelujah, even as we speak, the
dancers—young & enthusiastic cheerleading
types—are springing out of the wood-work in large
commercial shopping centers in Campania and dancing
their little hearts out for ol' VW. It's enough to
make me buy a Fiat.
- Seems to me
I've heard this song before... but the Coroglio road is now
definitively and once and for all open again for
alternating one-way traffic until it closes the next
time. The road is the only convenient way from
Posillipo to Bagnoli and back. "Alternating one-way
traffic" doesn't mean that you are forced to drive
back and forth up and down the hill forever like
some doomed Flying Dutchman (at least I don't think it means
that). They have these traffic lights that let the
downers go down and then the uppers go up.
New
quarters for 600 Rom—gypsies—will be built in the
Scampia and Soccavo sections of Naples. That will
cover about 80% of the gypsy nomad population in and
around Naples. The new quarters will cost around 35
million euros and will look more or less like other
"popular" blocks of flats in those two areas.
"Popular" doesn't mean that people like them; it
means that they can be built quickly and stuffed
with people. The main impetus for the project is the
need to get rid of the squalid gypsy encampments.
There are no colorful horse-drawn wagons or gypsy
violinists playing Monti's Czardas; there is a lot of open
sewage, though.
- Capri. Four
Neapolitan tourists from ages 17 to 41 have
been caught taking a forbidden swim in the cool
waters of the Blue Grotto. That's right—inside. They
got in there at a time when high tides forced the
suspension of the normal tourist traps
boats. My heart goes out to them because I tried
that once with some other scuba divers and we never
even got close before we were spotted and warned
off. These four dropped a rubber raft into the water
from a larger motor launch and went in for a dip.
They have been banned from the island for three
years and face some generically bogus charges of
creating a maritime hazard.
- More on Capri.
The summer is winding down, and that’s fine because
it has been a disastrous summer for the Blue Grotto,
one of the island’s greatest tourist attractions.
First, in mid-August, they caught a local
businessman dropping hundreds of glass bottles in
the water near the entrance. Well, glass sinks, you
say—maybe that’s not so bad. (You’re wrong, of
course.) Then, a few days ago, two owners of a local
restaurant were caught fouling the waters with raw
sewage. They just dumped it in. Now, the Blue Grotto
has been closed until they can figure out what has
caused the gigantic film of white foam in front of
the entrance; the foul, burning odor was enough to
send four boat operators to the hospital. Chemical
analysis says that it is a combination of chlorine
and bleach. Likely culprits are leaks from sewage
lines or nearby swimming pools.
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