Naples
Miscellany 11 (mid-February,
2008) —Art
competition. Il Napoli al
cuore is the name of an art competition recently on exhibit at
the Maschio Angioino. Readers should
note that the
masculine definite article, il (the),
in
front of the name of the city refers to the Naples
soccer team, not the
city, itself. (Thus, "The Naples of today..." would be La Napoli d'oggi..."). So the title
of the competition is
something like "Naples soccer at heart." It is, in fact, an
exhibit and judging of painting, sculpture, videos, and photography
presented in celebration of the return of the city's soccer team to the
A-League, the major league in Italy. More than 50 artists from Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Portugal, and Brazil entered works. I have no idea who won any of the prizes, and I simply picked a painting (shown here) that I liked. It is by Luna Hall. —The Graffiti artist known as Raffo has presented us with art of a different kind. On a wall in the Ponticelli section of the city, he has spray-painted into semi-permanence his rendition of Edvard Munch's famous 1893 painting, The Scream. No matter what you may have heard as to why the man on the bridge is screaming, Raffo tells us that it can only be the garbage situation in Naples. The blood-red backdrop in Raffo's version shows Mt. Vesuvius, and the Screamer is surrounded by piles of garbage bags. Raffo's version has become locally very popular, and photos and postcards are already making the rounds. He says that the Mona Lisa is next! She will be holding bags of garbage. Whether or not she will still be smiling is anyone's guess. —Women's Basketball. I have learned from a kind correspondent that "Naples has one of the best women's basketball teams in the country...They won the Italian league championship last year, a first for —Parking. One illicit but widely tolerated profession used to be that of the car-parker. You could double- and triple-park (even for the entire day), leave the key, and this guy would watch your and everyone else's car and jockey them around so people could get in and out. When it was time to leave, you tipped him (less than the authorized parking garages charged for the same period). It was a valuable service, since there were/are never enough parking spaces in Naples. They city cracked down on the practice a few years ago, and these sidestreet valets all but disappeared. They are making a comeback. A local paper shows a photo of a herd of illegally-parked cars in front of a police station! The photo did not show the parker, presumably hiding off camera. Apparently, the cops don't seem to mind. —Wrong color! The recently
restored white facade of the Albergo
dei Poveri, the gigantic ex-Royal Poorhouse is apparently the
wrong color, at least partially. Restoration has been underway since
2001 on what certainly had to be the largest dilapidated building in
Europe. They looked at the original plans of Ferdinando
Fuga and decided
that the whole thing was white. Wrong! It was white and pink—this
according to
various culture mavens who claim to know. The restorers now say they
knew that all along and were going to go back and paint over the white
with pink in the proper places. As for the future of the building, that
is pretty much up in the air.(There are two items on the history, restoration, and plans for the Albergo.See here and here.) |