Friday, November 11, 2022

Basking in Chungnam-Do’s Natural Beauty


Chungcheongnam-Do, or Chungnam-Do, is south Korean province, which is located not far from the capital city of Seoul, that features beautiful natural vistas. In order to get more Indonesian tourist to visit the province’s pristine locations, the Korean Tourism Organization (KTO) Indonesia recently hosted a dinner for several travel agents to help promote it more effectively.
The dinner was held on July 31. Hopefully, the KTO and travel agents will offer packages to encourage more Indonesians to visit the province. On your way there, you can experience South Korea’s KTX bullet train, which will take you from Incheon International Airport to the beautiful province within 40 minutes.
Once arrive there, enjoy Chungnam-do’s beautiful beach, which will provide you with excellent sunset scenes. After that, visit Taeanhaean National Marine Park, the Baegmagang River and more. Also take delight in the province’s summer mud festival and warm water fountains.
Then take time to visit the province’s Baekje historical site that comprises ancient gates, graveyards and relics, which was designated by UNESCO as a world heritage site in 2015.
This year, the Magok temple in Gongju city was also designated as a UNESCO world heritage site.

Monday, October 10, 2022

Sailing Smoothly with Richard Mille

The Caribbean Sea, Luxury Swiss brand Richard Mille supported the annual Les Voiles des Saint Barth sailing tournament – organized for the ninth time this year – in the Caribbean Sea in April. The brand also created a specially designed trophy for the tournament’s winners.
Participants took pride in taking part in the tournament, which comprised 53 crews in seven different classes, showing their solidarity with their fellow sailors despite logistical difficulties. They also did this in honor of the people who survived Hurricane Irma in August last year.
The designer of the eponymous brand said he had placed his trust in the participants’ endurance in taking on the Les Voiles de Saint Barth, which embodied the triumph of the human spirit. The event was launched in 2010.
“Now that the event has reached maturity, it has become a major event in the Caribbean. We want to maintain its world-class reputation to make it more attractive. Therefore, we are strengthening our participation in solidarity with the organizers. Helping to create a successful event is a source of a great shared pride, which builds true camaraderie,” Richard Mile said.

Friday, September 9, 2022

GENDENG VILLAGE Center of Wayang Kulit


FOR LOVERS AND COLLECTORS of wayang kulit (leather puppets), Gendeng village in Bangunjiwo yakarta, it is where tens of artisans ;prodsubdistrict, Kasihan district, Bantu regency, Yogyakarta, is well known.
Located some seven kilometers southwest of downtown Yogyakarta, it is where tens of artisans produce Yogyakarta style wayang kulit of high quality.
It is therefore not surprising to learn that the village is not just well known among wayang kulit lovers and collectors, but also among noted puppeteers such as Ki Timbul Hadiprayitno and Ki Hadi Sugito, said to have puppets made in Gendeng in their wayang kulit collections for show purposes.
“We prioritize quality. As for myself, It’s not just a matter of generating revenue but more importantly a desire to preserve leather puppets,” said local artisan Sagio, 67, the owner of a puppet handicraft workshop.
The history of Gendeng as a center of wayang kulit production started back in 1925 when a newcomer named Bundu came to the village and introduced puppetry, including how to make wayang kulit, to the local villagers.he later had a pupil named Walijo, also known as Atmo Sukarto, or more commonly, Pujo. It was Pujo who then introduced the puppet handicraft industry to the village in the 1930s.
Gendeng gained its golden years a puppet production center especially during the rule of Indonesia’s second president Soeharto, who was also known as a wayangkulit show lover.
“I was once sent to Japan to promote wayang kulit there,” said Sagio, adding that he spent a year there from 1969 to 1970 for the purpose.
Ever since, he said, he was frequently sent to other countries for the same reason. Sometimes he even visited a country more than once. Among the countries he visited were the Netherlands, France, England, Hungary, New Zealand, the Unites State, India, china, Thailand and Singapore.
Sagio himself said he started learning about puppet making when he was 11 years of age. He said he first learned from Pujo, then directly learned it from Bundu. When Bundu passed away. Sagio frequently went to the Yogyakarta Palace to have a closer look at the palace’s wayang kulit collection to learn about their fine and high quality.
This accounts for why Sagio is well known as an artisan specializing in fine and high quality wayang kulit in the Yogyakarta style, although he is also capable of making puppets in the Surakarta style.
Workshops
He said he initially also learned puppetry and was once a puppeteer but he finally decided to focus on puppet making because he realized that no formal institution for puppet making was available.
“There were schools for puppeteers, but none for puppet makers, that is even still the case now,” he said.
Gendeng’s glow as a center of wayang kulit production faded away following Soeharto’s fall in 1998, leaving only about 50 artisans in the village.
Wayang kulit handicraft showrooms and workshops are mostly centered in the area around the subdistrict hall, as the hall is also located in Gendeng. Among the well-known workshops ar those of Sukono, SAntoso, Sabarno and Suprih.
“Many of them were previously my apprentices and now they have their own workshops,” said Sagio.
He added that he previously took on apprentices to be trained as wayang kulit artisans in his workshop, but he has not done so since 1998. Nowadays he only receives groups of students or tourists to experience puppet making at his workshop. Some stay for up to a week, others just for three to four hours.
Other workshops in the village also do the same. Apart from selling puppet products at different prices depending on their quality level and size, they also offer puppet making experiences.
“There are always tourists coming to the village to enjoy the experience,” said Sagio, adding that some 75% of the tourists visiting Gendeng were foreigners.
He said an average of 20 foreign tourists visited his workshop every moth, giving him a monthly revenue of about IDR 20 million.
Products on offer in the workshops include puppets of the standard size for both collections and souvenirs, puppets of bigger and even huge sizes for decoration, puppets of smaller sizes for bookmarks or wedding souvenirs, and puppet key-rings.
In the village, tourists can also see the process of turning animal leather into parchments. For this they can go to Suyoto’s.
“I need at least three days to get this leather ready,” said Suyoto, 57, while currying a sheet of buffalo leather spread on a structure to be turned into parchment.
The process starts by submerging sun-dried buffalo leather overnight in a nearby river to soften it, then spreading it the following morning on a structure to dry and curry.
“The best leather for making puppets is buffalo,” said Suyoto, whose workshop is located some 100 meters to the east of Sagio’s.
To get to the village, visitors have to take a taxi or private vehicle, as no public transportation heading to Gendeng is available. However, it is just a stone’s throw from the renowned ceramic handicraft production center, Kasongan. Both Kasongan and Gendeng are under the same jurisdiction of Bangunjiwo district administration.
In fact, both are part of the subdistrict’s leading toruism and industrial package called KAJIGELEM, an abbreviation of Kasongan, Jipangan, Gendeng and Lemahdadi.
Jipangan is a bambbo handicraft production center while Lemahdadi is a stone statue production center. [Sources from the Jakarta Post, August 2018|words by: Sri Wahyuni]


Monday, August 1, 2022

LAKE TOBA Pearl of North Sumatra


THE EXPANSIVE BLUE that is Lake Toba, located in the midst of mountains, is an aweinspiring spectacle for all who visit it. They are mesmerized by the exotic view of the lake.
The lake has an area of 1,130 square kilometers and is not only the largest lake in Southeast Asia but also the world’s largest volcanic lake. The beautiful panorama makes the lake, which is located in seven regencies and towns, a favorite among local and international tourists. Zulkifli Fahmi, 42, a local visitor from Dairi, said he and his family visited Lake Toba almost every month. The teacher was full of praise for the lake’s beauty.
“It’s soothes the mind to see the beautiful lake; it gives me comfort,” Zulkifli told the Jakarta Post at Taman Simalem Resort, which offers views of the hills and mountains surrounding Lake Toba in Karo regency, on July 15.
Tourism Minister praised Lake Toba, saying it had a temperate climate, was highly popular and admirable. Arief said the government had designated Lake Toba as one of the tourist mainstays because of it strong allure.
“Lake Toba has a beautiful nature and an interesting history, especially on how it was formed as the result of a massive volcano eruption thousands of years ago that created this caldera. The nature itself is already a strong draw,” Arief said during a working visit to Medan.
Arief added that the culture of the Lake Toba area was also rich and had a strong character. Like culture-rich Bali, the Toba area has a deeply rooted Batak culture.
“That is another strength that Toba has. So, we want to empower this culture so that it becomes stronger and can lure more tourists to Lake Toba,” said Arief, stating that Lake Toba had tourist spots that had the potential to compete, with those in other regions.
The Tourism Ministry has released the Top10 list of tourist sites around Lake Toba. They are:

Tomok
Tomok is a traditional village acting as a gateway to Samosir Island. It is here that the large sarcophagus of king Sidabutar can be found. Tomok has long been a tourist village on Samosir. There are three interesting tourist attractions in TOmok village, the Sigale-Gale statue, the burial ground of former Batak kings and the Batak Museum.
Holbung Hill (Teletubies Hill)
Holbung Hill is in janji Marhatan village in Samosir regency. The hill is also known as Teletubies Hill. Many international tourists visit the hill to go trekking. The top of the hill can be reached in 10 to 15 minutes and offers an enthralling view of Lake Toba.
Situmurun Waterfall, Binangalom
Situmurun Waterfall is also known as Binangalom Waterfall because the watger flows from Binangalom village in lumban Julu district, toba Samosir regency.
The waterfall is special as the waterfalls directly into Lake Toba. The sensation of swimming against the current can be experienced at the waterfall.
Iman Sitinjo Tourist Park
Iman Sitinjo tourist park is located in the hills of Stinjo district, Dairi regency. The place combines the concepts of religious tourism and nature tourism. Aside from showcasing several spots of officially recognized places of worship, the place offers a beautiful panorama of the lake.
Beautiful Simarjarunjung Hill
As the name suggests, the hill, which is situated on Jl. Simarjunjung, a road crossing from Parapatto Merek, Karo regency, offers natural beauty. It offers a vantage point to view the lake.
Simarjarungjung Hill is managed in the same way as Kalibiru in Yogyagkarta, complete with tree house.
Paropo Beach.
Paropo is a village on the shores of Lake Toba. Besides being a popular camping area, the village, which is situated in Silahi Sabungan district, Dairi regency, is ideal for fishing.
Taman Labirin, Taman Simalem Resort
Taman Labirin is a mainstay of Taman Simalem Resort in karo district. The tourist destination offers a challenge to visitors to find their way out of a 500-square-meter labyrinth.
From here tourists can also visit the pearl of Lake Toba and enjoy the lake’s panorama from an elevation of 500 meters, a truly instagrammable spot.
Huta Ginjang
Huta Ginjang is located in Muara district, North Tapanuli. The place can be reached in 15 minutes from Silangit Airport, Huta Ginjang is situated on a highland. From here, visitor have a beautiful view of Lake Toba.
Most people visit Huta Ginjang Hill either in the morning to catch the sunrise or in the afternoon for sunset. The place also has a pine forest and is popular for paragliding.
Sipinsur Park
Sipinsur is an ideal location for relaxation. Visitors can feel their exhaustion and stress ebbing away when they spend time in the park. Sipinsur Park is situated in Paerung village, Humbang Hasundutan. Here, visitors can stroll amid pine trees and enjoy the invigorating breeze.
Lae Mbilulu Waterfall
Lae Mbilulu Waterfall, located in Pakpak Bharat regency, has an elevation of around 40 meters, its pool a depth of 5 meters and an area of 60 square meters. To the right and the left is enchanting greenery surrounding pristine water.
Of the 10 tourist destinations around Lake Toba, Taman Simalem Resort is the only one to have won a 2017 Indonesian Sustainable Tourism Award (ISTA) in the environmental preservation category from the Tourism Ministry.

Taman Simalem Resort general manager Eddy Tanoto said the national level award was the first one it received from the Tourism Ministry since the establishment was opened in 2008.
Eddy expressed pride in the achievement because the 200-ha agriculture and eco-themed resort was the only one in North Sumatra to have won second place in the environmental preservation category.
“We won the award thanks to the support from the community and the governments of Karo gegency and North Sumatra province,” Eddy stated.
A tourism player, Tandeanus Sukardi from Erni Tour, praised the development of tourism at Lake Toba over the last few years. Tandeanus likened Lake toba to a shining pearl. Tandeanus said many international tourists visited the lake and enthused about their experience.
“I often take groups of international tourists to Lake Toba, especially to Taman Smalem Resort,” said Tandeanus, adding many of the tourists hailed from Singapore, Malaysia and European countries. [Sources from the Jakarta Post, August 2018|words by: Apriadi Gunawa]

Thursday, July 7, 2022

BINTAN ISLAND A Resort Island Rich in History

MOST VISITORS would not know it today, but Penyengat Island in the Riau Islands province was once the capital of a Malay Sultanete known as Nusantara. Many people would struggle to locate Riau, which has about 2,000 islands, but the main islands of Batam and Bintan are both located less than an hour by fast ferry south of Singapore in the South China Sea or 90 minutes by plane from Jakarta. interestingly, Bintan is two-and-a-half times bigger than Singapore so Riau is quite a significant regional island group and yet one that is not yet on everyone's travel radar.
After the fall of Melaka in 1511, the Malay regional political power switched to Penyengat Island, which was considered the center of the Johor-Riau Sultanate before the Dutch colonials split it up in 1824. Singapore was then considered part of the Sultanate.
Plans are afoot to give the striking gold and several old cannons and a green Grand Mosque on Pulau Penyengat Bintan adn the adjoining old fort heritage protection. The site is located on Pulau Penyengat just a few minutes boat ride fro mTanjung Pinang and includes a fort with several old cannons and a moat, the Sultan of Riau's Grand Mosque and other heritage buildings.
Many visitors to Bintan head to destinations such as Bintan Resorts on the northern coastline, check into one of several resorts in the special tourism zone and chill out along beautiful palm-fringed beaches. While this is a great way to relax, it is also recommended that visitors hire a vehicle adn take a trip around the island to discover its history and Indonesian culture. Be aware, though, that it is big island and you will scarcely scratch the surface in a day's journey of discovery.

Boatbuildings and Kelongs
Being and island of mostly fisherfolk, seafood is bountiful all over the island. Most visitors will be taken to a small wooden boat building yard and then to one of several kelongs (places where fishermen store their catch) at Trikora on the east coast where the rustic restaurants on stilts over the water keep fresh fish in nets below and haul it up upon request. Seafood such as fish, prawns, squid, crabs and oysters could not be any fresher and it is all very affordable. Restaurant Pantai Trikora is recommended as it offers fresh ocean-caught seafood and a breezy over-the-water ambiance.
Akau Market in Potong Lembu in the capital of Tanjung Pinang is the place to dine on delicious dishes in the open air under the stars. Most of the food is cooked fresh and includes famous dishes like oysters omelette, ikan bakar (grilled fish), nasi goreng (fried rice), ayam penyet (fried chicken) and a local favorite called gong gong (sea snails). The stalls ope nat 5 p.m. and close at midnight.

Wetland Wonderland
Parts of the Bintan coastline and rivers that flow into the ocean are lined with mangrove forests. These can be explored from the safety of small boats, which head upriver to the narrowest reaches of the overhanging forest. Long-tailed macaques and mangrove snakes lurk in the trees and it is possible to see them plus lizards, birds and some fascinating plant life along the way. Skimming fast across the water in a small boat is also an exhilarating experience, while visiting in the early evening to admire the flickering fireflies is a memorable experience.

Resort Living
There are various accommodation options in or near Tanjung Pinang adn resorts along the east coast centered on Trikora.
The finest accommodation is within the Bintan Resorts precinct in the north of the island Bintan Lagoon Resort ia a large property that stretches along a picturesque palm-lined coastline. It has an extensive selection of recreational activities and dining opportunities.
The added bonus here is that golfers can play the Jack Nicklaus Sea View adn ian Baker-Finch Woodlands courses. Both are in immaculate condition and while the landscaping is similar on both courses, they each offer different golf experiences.
The par 72 Nicklaus course of 6,420 meters has wide-open fairways, which encourage golfers to open their shoulders to get some distance on their drive ,but bunkers round the greens make approach shots challenging.
The par 72 Baker-Finch course of 6,211 metes is narrower as it weaves its way through the coastal forest ang golfers need to pay more attention to their game to stay on top of it.
Facilities at the resort and several other properties here, including Club Med and Banyan Tree, ensure Bintan's popularity with Singaporeans. Indonesian visitors can join in the fun here or the sights attractions in other parts of the island.

Travel File

Getting There
There are directy daily flights from Jakarta to Bintan Island on Sriwijaya Air. The alternatives ar to fly to neigboring Batam Island and catch a ferry across or, to fly to Singapore and catch a ferry to Bintan from Tanah Merah Ferry Terminal.


Where to Stay
The Bintan Resorts precinct, or Lagoi, is located on the northern side of the island. Visitors can stay in Luxury seaside accommodation such as the Bintan Lagoon Resort (www.bintanlagoon.com), which
is set in spacious landscaped grounds. It has a comprehensive range of services adn facilities. In additionto an expansive beachfront, there are many food and beverage outlets, watersports, pools and two championship golf courses. In Trikora, stay at the Trikora club and resort (www.trikorabeachclub.com) while on the outskirts of Tanjung Pinang, the Pelangi Hotel and Resort (www.pelangihotel.com) offers resort living near the main town.

Monday, June 6, 2022

SURFER’S Paradise


FOR THREE DAYS, Dean Izzi rode the waves off Sorake beach in the North Sumatra regency of Nias Selatan. The Australian surfer enjoyed waves of up to 10 meters.
Dean Izzi said the waves at Sorake were great for surfing, adding that Sorake Beach was a surfers paradise.
“The waves here are far out, extreme and fit very well for surving,” Izzi told The Jakarta Post at Sorake Beach on July 26.
Sorake Beach is located on Nias Island west of the Sumatra mainland, more specifically in the village of Botohilitano in Telu, Dalam district.
The beach face the Indian Ocean, which explains the extreme waves wit hcrests as high as 15 meters. The waves also tend to roll perfectly before breaking at the water’s edge. Sorake Beach’s waves spoil surfers with five levels of height to choose from. Skillful surfers can perform incredible stunts on each level as they ride the waves, which can reach a length of 200 meters.
Once a best-kept secret among surfers, the beach is becoming quite a well-known tourist spot. From April until August, the beach hosts many surfers from various countries.
Social Zagoto, a Sorake community figure, said for five months starting in April Sorake Beach is packed with surfers. Zagoto added that, during that period, the rolls can reach a length of 200 meters.
“That’s what draws the world’s surfers to Sorake Beach,” Sosial told the Post on July 26.
Social also said that, this month, hundreds of surfers, including Macekly from Hawaii, had gathered at the beach to try and tame Sorake’s rolling waves. The surfers usually stay for several days at Sorake Beach, which has some starred hotels.

“The shortest period of stay is one week; some even spend a few months here. They want to really enjoy the beauty of the nature and extreme waves,” said Sosial, who has been accompanying and helping the surfers who come to Sorake Beach.
Social explained that Sorake Beach had several specific characteristics not found at other beaches, namely that the waves don’t rely on the direction of the wind, so surfers can ride the waves to their heart’s content. This, according to Sosial, also makes the beach popular with surfers.

“Many of the wolrd’s top surfers say the waves here are the second-best for surfing after Hawaii,” he said, citing several international competitions that were held at Sorake Beach.

In a matter of weeks, the administration of South Nias, in cooperation with the Tourism Ministry and the World Surf League (WSL), will hold the Surf Qualifying Sereis Nias Pro championship. The event will be held from Aug, 24 to 28 at Sorake Beach.
The head of the South Nias Office of Tourism, Youth and sports, Anggraeni Dachi, said the event was the government’s way to support, introduce and develop tourism at Sorake Beach.

“Our aim is that the international surfers participating in the Surf Qualifying Series will get to appreciate the special characteristics of the waves at Sorake,” said Anggraeni. 

The event offers a total of US$15,000 in prize money and trophies.

The WSL is a professional surfing tour founded in 1976 and dedicates itself to promoting world-class professional surfers. The WSL has its headquarters in LA, USA.
Aggraeni noted that various international serufing events held at Sorake Beach had positively affected the local economy.
“We are grateful that the people’s economy is getting a boost with Sorake Beach drawing in many surfers from many countries,’ said Anggraeni, who added that the regency was reliant of beach tourism.
Aside from Sorake Beach, south Nias regency also has Lagundri Beach. The white-sandy beach is located some 13 kms to the south from Teluk Dalam district. The beach borders directly with Sorake  Beach, and like Sorake Beach, Lagudnri Beach is popular among international surfers, even though the crests are not as high as those at Sorake Beach.
At Lagundri Beach, we’ll see more visitors swimming, sunbathing or snorkeling. The beach of the nhosts attractions like diving and snorkeling activities as the sea off Lagundri Beach is filled with beautiful fish

Thursday, May 5, 2022

Hour China


Ep1. ANCESTORS
*wuxi – qinhuan : Zhangguo – yellow river
*Zhukou – 1950 communits
*Yangzhou 1900 BC : xia, fuxi , nuwa . Erlitou, Henan province : old town, grandcanal 605 BC
#Xia Dynasty
#Shang Dynasty 16th – 11th cBCE : first chinese letter :  big, water,heaven
*Anyang – Henan
*Shangqiu 1511 : King Di Xin 1105- 1046 BCE
#Zhou dynasty 1066 – 256 BCE : Taoisme, Qufu capital – The Analect of Confuncious, warring states period 5th cBCE (metofora hidup) : kemanusiaan & morality. 551 – 479 BCE, what a joy it is to have friends come from far away/kebahagiaan adalah memililik teman yang datang dari tempat yang jauh.
#Qin dynasty 221 – 2016 BCE / Qin Shi Huang Di 259 – 210 BCE :  Xian – changgan
#Han Dynasty / Liu Bang 265 – 195 BCE / 206 BCE – 220 CE :
*Luoyang – Sima Qian 145 – 86 BCE ; choi’s city

Ep.2 SILK ROAD & CHINA SHIP
#TANG Empire 618 – 907  AC * Xuan Zhang : Longmen Caves  - Matanga. Taklamakan Desert / masuklah kau tidak bisa keluar kembali.
Empire taizong 598 – 649 – Anxing
*Gaozhang 640-648 Taizong’s campaign in the west ; Grandcanal : Du Mu “Saat Yangzhou berjarak 16 km dari angin musim panas” 830 eufisme dalam puisi.
*Xinjiang – expanse muslim – Li Bai / bertempur di barat. Sungai kashar – Sung patia – Tiangasan mountain – Jiara, Xuanshong empir vs An Lusan, Sin Siming : “Adegan musim semi “ by Du Fu.
*Xi’an 638 AC. : xian ling mosoleum 700 Ac.

GOLDEN AGE
#TANG EMPIRE 967 AC collapse/ Kaifeng – Central china
#SONG DYNASTY 960 AC -  chen duan – hua san – 20 banjir besar –  Shanghai china art palace 1120  - AC – Meng Yuan Lo
Taizou Song Founder
Expansion of Kaifen 960 – 980 Pagoda Besi di Bukit Panjang Umur. – festival di sungai 1120 AC the festival on the river Kaifeng  -karakter china – bi seng.  – susong 1020-1101.
Sima guang – Henan university
1100 Emperor Huizong 1082 -1135
The siege of Kaifeng 1127
Qing Zho On the defeat of the nation – Song Retreat 1129
Capital of the southern song 1132 Hang Zhou.
Tieshan 19/03/1279
Lu xiu fu  : the end of song dynasty
Hong Wu Empire 1328 - 1398

Ep.4
#Ming Dynasty abad ke-14 (1368 – 1644); Nanjing / sang pembawa lentera; Zhu Shuan Yang; Hong Wu emperor 1328 – 1398 /Shaoxing / Zhao Village : Fujian / Zhang Dai (Biksu) 1645.
Wang Ren yu (penyair) / Xian (Tang’s City)

Manchu / Qing Dynasty
Kangxi Empire
Quangzhou  / Canton

Note: silk road or silk route




Silk Road, also called Silk Route, ancient trade route, linking China with the West, that carried goods and ideas between the two great civilizations of Rome and China. Silk went westward, and wools, gold, and silver went east. China also received Nestorian Christianity and Buddhism (from India) via the Silk Road.
Originating at Xi’an (Sian), the 4,000-mile (6,400-km) road, actually a caravan tract, followed the Great Wall of China to the northwest, bypassed the Takla Makan Desert, climbed the Pamirs (mountains), crossed Afghanistan, and went on to the Levant; from there the merchandise was shipped across the Mediterranean Sea. Few persons traveled the entire route, and goods were handled in a staggered progression by middlemen.
With the gradual loss of Roman territory in Asia and the rise of Arabian power in the Levant, the Silk Road became increasingly unsafe and untraveled. In the 13th and 14th centuries the route was revived under the Mongols, and at that time the Venetian Marco Polo used it to travel to Cathay (China). It is now widely thought that the route was one of the main ways that plague bacteria responsible for the Black Death pandemic in Europe in the mid-14th century moved westward from Asia.
Part of the Silk Road still exists, in the form of a paved highway connecting Pakistan and the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, China. The old road has been the impetus behind a United Nations plan for a trans-Asian highway, and a railway counterpart of the road has been proposed by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP). The road inspired cellist Yo-Yo Ma to found the Silk Road Project in 1999, which explored cultural traditions along its route and beyond as a means for connecting arts worldwide across cultures.

Monday, April 4, 2022

France, Italy mark 500th anniversary of Leonardo's death

#Italian President Sergio Mattarella (L) and French President Emmanuel Macron pay their respects at the tomb of Italian renaissance painter and scientist Leonardo da Vinci to commemorate the 500th anniversary of his death, at the Saint-Hubert Chapel of the Chateau d'Amboise during a visit in Amboise, on May 2, 2019. (POOL/AFP/Philippe Wojazer)
French President Emmanuel Macron and Italian counterpart Sergio Mattarella on Thursday kicked off commemorations to mark 500 years since Leonardo da Vinci died in France, paying their respects to the Renaissance genius in a show of unity after months of diplomatic tensions.
"The bond between our countries and our citizens is indestructible," Macron said after the two men lunched at the Clos Luce, the sumptuous manor house where Leonardo spent the last three years of his life.
Mattarella and Macron, who was accompanied by his wife Brigitte, began their visit at the royal chateau in Amboise, where the heads of state laid wreaths at Leonardo's grave.
The Italian leader had started his day with a visit to the fire-ravaged Notre Dame cathedral in Paris.
The joint celebrations come after months of mounting diplomatic tensions between Paris and Rome over the hardline policies of Italy's populist government and its support for France's anti-government "yellow vest" protesters.
In the worst diplomatic crisis between the two countries since World War II, Paris briefly recalled its ambassador from Rome.
Amboise, a sleepy town on the Loire River where Leonardo died in 1519 aged 67, was in virtual lockdown because of fears of protests by France's grassroots "yellow vest" movement.
Amboise was turned into a ghost town, with traffic banned within a five-kilometer radius and the usually teeming restaurants and shops shuttered. On Wednesday, dozens of cars were towed away, with some foreign owners apparently unaware of the draconian security measures in the town of just 13,000.
The presidential helicopter arrived on a river island in the heart of the town, touching down on a pad usually used to launch hot-air balloons over the chateau-studded valley.
Also Thursday, the two presidents visited the sprawling chateau of Chambord -- whose central double-helix staircase is attributed to Leonardo though the first stone was not laid until four months after his death.
Among glitterati attending the events were Italian star architect Renzo Piano, French astronaut Thomas Pesquet and historian Stephane Bern, a prominent French television personality.
At Chambord, Pesquet told a group of around 500 Italian and French youths: "If Leonardo were alive today, maybe he would be a European astronaut."
The entire Loire Valley has seized on Leonardo's quincentenary as that of the Renaissance in general, planning more than 500 events across the region, with Bern as the figurehead.
Read also: At Amboise, Leonardo's last years paint a picture of Franco-Italian harmony
'Architect of the king'
Francis I, known as the "Sun King of the 16th century", is widely credited with bringing the Renaissance to France, even if his predecessor Louis XII had begun the process by bringing in architects and artisans from Florence, Milan and Rome.
Leonardo was 64 when he accepted the young Francis I's invitation to Amboise, at a time when rivals Michelangelo and Raphael were rising stars.
With Leonardo's commissions drying up, it came as a great relief and no small vindication for the Tuscan artist, who received a handsome stipend as the "first painter, engineer and architect of the king".
At the time, Francis I was barely 23, and his ambitious mother Louise of Savoy "knew that Leonardo would be the man who would allow her son to flourish", Catherine Simon Marion, managing director of the Clos Luce, told AFP.
Leonardo brought with him three of his favorite paintings: the Mona Lisa, the Virgin and Child with Saint Anne, and Saint John the Baptist -- all of which today hang in the Louvre museum in Paris.
Italy and France have also sparred over an accord under which Italy will lend several Leonardos to the Louvre in October.
With fewer than 20 Leonardo paintings still in existence, many Italians are resentful that the Louvre possesses five of them, as well as 22 drawings.
During his three years in Amboise, Leonardo organised lavish parties for the court and worked to design an ideal city for Francis at nearby Romorantin -- one of the polymath's many unrealized projects -- all while continuing his research

Thursday, March 3, 2022

Tales of Leonardo, enigmatic genius GINA DOGGETT


A picture taken in center Milan on May 3, 2019 shows the details of a statue of Italian Renaissance genius Leonardo da Vinci done by Italian sculpture Pietro Magni. (AFP/Miguel Medina)
Leonardo da Vinci, who died 500 years ago on Thursday, lives in the collective memory as an enigmatic genius who embodied the Italian Renaissance. Here are some anecdotes about his extraordinary life and work.
'Fake news': Leonardo died in the arms of King Francis I
An 1818 painting by French artist Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres shows Leonardo da Vinci breathing his last with his patron, France's King Francis I, at his bedside.
The scene was inspired by an account in "Lives of the Artists" by Giorgio Vasari, first published in 1550.
Vasari, seen as the father of art history, wrote that Leonardo "died in the arms of the monarch". The problem is that it could not be true. According to historical records, the king was a two-day ride away in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, near Paris, for the baptism of his second son on May 3, the day after the Renaissance master died.
While the Ingres painting, which hangs in the Petit Palais in Paris, is the best-known depiction of the sentimental fiction, it was itself inspired by a 1781 painting by Francois-Guillaume Menageot, which is on display at the royal chateau of Amboise after meticulous restoration work for the quincentenary.
Lover of birds, and flight
A story about Leonardo speaks to both his love of nature and fascination with flight. He would often pity cooped up birds on sale in markets, plunk down the asking price for them and then release them into the air. Leonardo had a legendary obsession with the flight of birds and how understanding the mechanism could lead to the creation of a human flying machine.
Read also: France, Italy mark 500th anniversary of Leonardo's death
The face of a traitor
Leonardo was in the habit of roaming the streets of Milan in search of beautiful or unusual faces, according to Giorgio Vasari, the 16th-century father of art history. "He would follow any such... through the whole day, until the figure of the person would become so well impressed on his mind that, having returned home, he would draw him as readily as though he stood before him," Vasari wrote.
But when it came to the face of Judas for The Last Supper, Leonardo was at a loss as to how to portray a man who "possessed a heart so depraved as to be capable of betraying his Lord". Work on the famous mural at the Santa Maria delle Grazie monastery dragged on, and its prior grew so impatient that he complained to the Duke of Milan. He fumed that Leonardo would "sometimes remain half a day... absorbed in thought before his work, without making any progress that he could see," Vasari related. "This seemed to him such a strange waste of time."
Summoned by the Duke, Leonardo explained that "men of genius are sometimes producing the most when they seem to be labouring the least" and revealed his difficulty finding a face for Judas, as well as that of Jesus, which he feared that "he could not hope to find on earth."
At least for Judas, Leonardo had a fallback plan. He told the Duke he could always use the prior's face. Henceforth, "the poor prior, utterly confounded... left Leonardo in peace," Vasari wrote.
Oh, that smile!
One of the many artistic conventions that Leonardo da Vinci upended was the portrayal of people smiling, with no smile more famous than that of his Mona Lisa.
Facial expressions were a source of deep fascination for Leonardo, who conducted meticulous anatomical studies to determine the nerves that trigger them.
Biographer Walter Isaacson writes that while by day Leonardo was painting Mona Lisa, by night he "was in the depths of the morgue... peeling the flesh off cadavers and exposing the muscles and nerves underneath."
And how did he get the young wife of a Florentine silk merchant to smile through hour upon hour of sittings?
Contemporary biographer Giorgio Vasari wrote in the 1550 work "Lives of the Artists" that Leonardo saw the need to keep the lady entertained, and hired musicians and jesters for the purpose. An 1863 painting by Cesare Maccari shows such a studio scene, with Leonardo's subject flanked by musicians. The work is housed at the Museo Cassioli Pittura in Siena, Italy.

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Steeped in history but crumbling Albania’s ‘slanted city’


The Lolomani dwelling, formerly the home of the Ottoman period family of that name, was once an impressive sight in the mountainside town of Gjirokastra in southern Albania.

Now the house lies in ruins, like dozens of others in the "City of Stone," defined by its castle, steep cobblestone roads and silvery-coloured limestone structures with views of the Drino Valley near the border with Greece.
Many of the centuries-old, fortified buildings, which won the town a place on the prestigious UNESCO World Heritage List in 2005, are a tourist attraction but are at risk of disappearing.
Some are deserted or have not been maintained for years, others underwent changes that have destroyed their historic value, or have too many owners to agree on the necessary work or they are simply too poor to afford the repairs.
Authorities in the Balkan nation don't have the means to restore them either.
"I feel pain for every stone, every wall that is getting damaged," sighs Email Nacaj, a 58-year-old house painter, who remembers the collapse of the Lolomani house in winter 2016.
Below, the roof of his own house has half fallen in.
"I'm scared here, but my mother does not want to leave," he says.
Even if he had the money, he couldn't do anything – his cousin, who lives in the capital, Tirana, and is a co-owner, refuses.
Out of 615 monuments in the town's historic centre "more than half are subjected to illegal or out-of-context constructions, while 169 are in critical condition or at risk of collapse," warned Europa Nostra, a pan-European federation of heritage NGOs, early this year.
Once upon a time
Most of the buildings date from the 17th and 18th centuries, although the town's origins go back further and its walls were built in the 3rd century.
Albania's most famous writer Ismail Kadare famously described his native Gjirokastra as the "slanted city, set at a sharper angle than perhaps any other city on earth."

"It was surely the only place in the world where, if you slipped and fell in the street, you might well land on the roof of a house," he wrote in his 1971 novel "Chronicle In Stone."
Massive emigration has compounded the buildings' fate, as Gjirokastra has not been immune to the trend plaguing Albania.
The town's population has dropped from 34,000 in 2011 to less than 25,000, according to Engjell Seriani, head of tourism at the town hall.
Its houses are named after their original owners, dignitaries of the Ottoman Empire such as Lolomani, Karaulli, Fico, Zeko, Babameto, whose power was measured by the number of chimneys on their homes.
Today, Sokol Karaulli, a descendant of one of those noble families, says his way of life is a far cry from the ostentation of his home's substantial five chimneys.
A former soldier but not yet eligible for his pension, he says they only survive thanks to the salary of his pastry chef wife.
"The day when we will say 'Once upon a time there was Gjirokastra' can happen," the 60-year-old warned.
Karaulli cut off the electricity on the first floor and placed plastic washing-up bowls to collect the leaking water that had already rotted the wooden frame of his crumbling house.
Worsening daily
Around the town's bazaar, the clean facades are down to a three-million-euro ($3.5-million) restoration footed by an Albanian-US association and the World Bank.
Small stalls tout souvenirs to tourists, 77,000 of whom visited the citadel last year. Their numbers grow 10 to 15 percent annually.
"However Gjirokastra is not only the bazaar and those emblematic places," said architect Lejla Hadzic, of the NGO Cultural Heritage without Borders (CHwB).
Elsewhere, "the situation ... is getting worse day by day," she said.
In 2014, the NGO had warned of the "rapid destruction" of the historic districts of the town, where Albania's former communist dictator Enver Hoxha grew up.
Of the 650 buildings it took into account, CHwB said 40 were in a very poor condition, 34 were in ruins, while 15 were on the verge of collapse.
Now, the number in ruins has gone up to 47, it says.
'Only one Gjirokastra in the world'
Today about 80 houses are uninhabited, raising the possibility that a leaky roof will affect the wooden structure.

"Every day, I see something that is wrong, as if the building is whispering to me to do something," said deputy mayor Vangjel Muco.
But with a total overall budget of 2.5-3 million euros, his municipality cannot tackle the issue properly.
Albanian Culture Minister Mirela Kumbaro insists the town "is no longer in danger" and that the government has taken the problem in hand.
Since 2013 structural changes to Gjirokastra houses have been banned. She also has high hopes for a newly passed law on cultural foundations, as well as for tourism after the conversion of about 20 houses into hotels.
But the CHwB believes that Gjirokastra can hope for "no more than 10,000 euros" from the national budget.
And renovating the Babameto house alone cost 160,000 euros which came from Sweden.
Just to reinforce all the ruins would take another 1.2 million euros, according to Hadzic.
"All the actors dealing with cultural heritage should really take it seriously and intervene as fast as possible because there's only one Gjirokastra in the world," she warned.
Source: AFP