Showing posts with label well. Show all posts
Showing posts with label well. Show all posts

16 October 2014

Italy 2014 Day Eight

 
Oh Day 8, the last one in Orvieto. Sunny. Bird calls echoing past the ancient stones worked into building blocks, through open windows and shutters. Real shutters. Working shutters. Not like here...
 
The beauty, the great beauty of being from Oklahoma is that we are one of the last settled places with moderate temperature on the earth. Certainly one of the last in America. Statehood established in 1907, we really have few buildings older than 125 years. No mountains. No ocean view.
People are our landscape and we have honed a lovely smiling populace.
But...when you travel, everything has texture and age. It is a most fortunate perspective...
Last day in the studio, we took it outside to the convent garden for sketching.
I tried. Of course I took on way too much. 
Next time I will just focus on a single urn.
Its just fine, photography is my sketchbook...
 
Alisa and I were determined to take in the last quarter of Orvieto.
We walked again to the east end near the train station and veered north.
 
At the Fortezza Albornoz, looking northward. Pozza Di San Patrizio is a well dug as part of the rebuild of the fortress in 1527. Oh how I wish we had attempted to go in to see the spiral staircase that descends its 173 foot depth. This is one of the things you want to 'go back' for. But I know how rarely I travel, 23 years since I had been to Europe, so will I pass this way again?
One must assume not.
One must get all you can while you are there.
I wish I had gone in a few more buildings...
Walking back toward city center we passed this lovely church, Chiesa Di S. Domenico, a 13th century church built by Dominican friars, later made into a female academy by Mussolini.
Italy makes historical dead guys come alive...
Just another lovely residence in Orvieto...
A pastry shop. Meringues.  Meringues....
And then, then we decided we had to watch the last Orvietan sunset from a terrace at the convent.
We sneak our bottle of wine from the refrigerator
narrowly escaping the sensible shoe steps of Sister Giovanna.
A destroyed cork does still access wine...
We take chairs from my room up the hallway and staircase,
though a door and find ourselves on the terrace. 
 
The sunset,
the Grek wine,
the smell of burning olive branches remaining from harvest.
Divinity...
Photo courtesy of Kristi and Beel Steiner...
 
Then we are caught, that terrace was on full display of the hallway.
 
A best moment, stolen, giggling, wobbly wine and dusk...
 
to be continued...

14 October 2014

Italy 2014 Day Six

Pam Garrison's book constructed in Italy.
 
This day was largely spent in the studio.
 
Binding the book and embellishing pages....
 
Painting a bag used to collect journal fodder.
 
 
Making a map of Orvieto in a little booklet. 
Pam's above...
Ingrid Petrini from Sweden was preparing love notes for her son's upcoming wedding.
Ingrid...sigh...fresh, funny, talented, lovely...
Completed books...
 
It began to rain late that day.
It was funny to discover the California girls were excited to hear thunder...
It set the mood for a trip down into Etruscan caves.
The Etruscan community lived in Orvieto and central Italy
hand digging caves in the 200-400 BC dates.
The Etruscans were largely absorbed by Roman Italians in time,
 leaving their highly efficient caves systems for us to get to know them.
 
In Orvieto if you own property, you also own and are responsible for the caves which you may find under your dwelling. This is one of 100s of caves mostly not available to the public.
 
The highlight of Pozzo della Cava is the well, 100 feet deep, with fresh water at its depth.
The caves were utilized and renovated in the middle ages.
The history of this city is layered most visibly in these underground labyrinths.
 
We laughed through dinner with young Francesca of Brooklyn living in LA. 
The many days of mucus production ended in straight up wheezing through dinner.
You can buy half bottles of wine in Italy.
So we did.
Photo courtesy of Alisa Noble
 
to be continued...

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...