Archive for August, 2007

Julio & Pietro Meet the Mayor

Tuesday, August 28th, 2007

Julio & Pietro with João Henrique

One week ago, on August 22, ICBIE President Pietro Gallina accompanied our talented artist Julio Costa to City Hall, for an appointment with the Mayor, João Henrique. The principal object of the meeting was to formalize the first international expedition of our two artists, and, in fact, an agreement was reached, where the City of Salvador will pay for the lads’ plane tickets to Italy.  (We’re cooking up a big splash tour that zigzags from Milan to Rome, starting at the end of September.  More to come.)

Pietro used the occasion to breach a larger issue.  He presented a strong letter, both outlining the plans for building a theater in our central back courtyard and solleciting city support for the project.  As a classic Pietro Gallina document, its proper place is in a dedicated article, in the Pages column to the left.

Alagados - A Haunting Videoclip

Sunday, August 26th, 2007

Many articles in this blog, especially those dealing with Mestre Pedro, have mentioned the Alagados, the infamous favela of shacks perched on wooden stilts over the All Saints’ Bay. Located less than a mile from the ICBIE, up the end of the bay to the south, this slum is a true no-man’s land. Their houses are built over the water, so the inhabitants enjoy a unique kind of impunity, because they aren’t guilty of occupying anyone’s land, and the labyrinth of foul smelling hovels makes it impenetrable for the police. Many of the residents are fiercely resistant outcasts, descended from ancient castes of runaway slaves, with their African culture full of spirits and voodoo, capoeira and cachaça.

Alagados

But things are changing. Since 2004, the city of Salvador has been steadily chipping away at this fetid hideaway, destroying the hovels, dumping landfill over the site, and then building modern housing for the former residents. In a few more years, the alagados may be gone, but problems will still remain, because these people don’t want to join modern society. They aren’t interested in getting a job, in order to pay for the electricity, cooking gas and water that they presently can steal outright, living in their stilt houses.

As with so many of Brazil’s problems, the great hope lies in the youngsters, who, with better education, can finally take a proud place in their society, without losing the treasures of their fascinating, secret culture.

One of the last things I did before leaving Salvador was to accompany Pietro and two fishermen in their chuggy little wooden motorboat on a leisurely zigzag cruise along the entire area. My discreet little video camera permitted me to take 130 photos and a dozen videoclips of an area that is rarely photographed. That material gave me an exciting project, as I transitioned back to the Italian dog-eat-dog, and it was fun to be able to finally use my home studio to prepare some proper music. You can see the YouTube video by clicking http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aXlTr-_0F_c , or find it in the Pages column to the right.

Roy Zimmerman

Plans and Projects

Sunday, August 19th, 2007

During this “holiday” week, Pietro and Marlene have been frantically busy. A good part of this has been my fault, as my house purchase triggered a swarm of bureaucratic tangles and tense meetings with lawyers and mediators that nonetheless raced along to a happy ending. But beyond that, they have been constantly involved in planning the next six months of ICBIE courses, projects and events, requiring a dense agenda of meetings, phone calls, emails and passionate discussions that filled each day from breakfast until late at night. What follows is a brief overview of the hottest issues.

1) The second semester of formal courses is set, with three Brazilian computer literacy teachers giving beginning and intermediate lessons, Marlene’s beginning and intermediate Italian, Pietro’s advanced Italian and choral singing, and a promising new teacher, Mary Overby, from North Carolina, who will be giving a two month session of beginning and intermediate English. The highly successful Hapkido lessons will also continue unabated. A steady stream of kids are enrolling every day.

2) Pietro has been busy pestering both the Faculty of Fine Arts of the Federal University of Bahia and the Mondrian Foundation in Holland, hoping to organize an exhibition of works by the fascinating photographer Angèle Etoundi Essamba. A native of Cameroun, she is a UNESCO Prize winner whose giant works powerfully convey the dignity of African women, breaking their stereotypes as mere water carriers and child bearers.

3) More negotiations have secured two important cultural events that Pietro has concocted for the city of Salvador. On November 1st, the Italian Consulate will sponsor an Exhibition-Conference to celebrate the five-hundredth anniversary of the first use of the word “America” (not the “Indies”) to describe the New World. In 1507, the term appeared on a map by the renowned Martin Waldseemüller, who coined it from the first name of Amerigo Vespucci, the Florentine-born explorer who was the first European to arrive on this part of the Brazilian coast; on November 1, 1501, he named the Bahia de Todos os Santos, to honor All Saints’ Day. On December 10th the city will hold a similar event honoring the two-hundredth anniversary of Giuseppe Garibaldi’s birth, underlining his groundbreaking role in Brazilian independence, when, in 1836, he allied with the gaucho rebels, the farrapos, to form the short-lived Republic of Rio Grande do Sul. During those struggles, he met Anita Ribeiro da Silva, who accompanied him on his subsequent Italian campaigns. The Italian writer Lisa Ginzburg, author of the new book Malía Bahia, will be a keynote speaker at the event.

4) Pietro is also attempting to bring the famous Italian photographer Franco Fontana to Salvador. Born in Modena in 1933, Fontana is recognized as the pioneer of color photography, which was previously considered as a gaudy and non-artistic rival of the sacrosanct black-and-white. His work has been shown around the world and in the most prestigious publications dedicated to the art, and Pietro hopes to arrange an exposition in Salvador’s Rodin Museum, if he can convince the Federal University of Bahia to sponsor the event.

5) A confirmed event is set for mid-December, when Anna Clementi arrives at the ICBIE to perform a concert of contemporary music. A fine singer, Anna is well known in Italian musical circles for her exciting performances that combine voice with flute playing and percussion, and her concert will include works by John Cage and Dieter Schnebel. We hope that Anna’s father, the venerable composer Aldo Clementi, will be able to accompany her on this visit to Salvador.

6) A more ambitious, long-term project intends to create a new museum here in Ribeira. Negotiations are underway with a colonel of the Brazilian Air Force, a general in the Navy and the Brazilian Embassy in Rome, to transform a big abandoned building on the seafront that was formerly the historic hydroport where, just a few weeks before Lindbergh’s flight in 1927, João Ribeiro de Barros arrived on the first solo crossing of the Atlantic Ocean. His record was discredited because his non-stop flight began from the island of Capo Verde, off the African coast, and ended at the island of Fernando de Noronha, off the Brazilian coast, before his arrival in Ribeira. There is a strong Italian connection in the story, as de Barros used a Savoia Marchetti SM55, which resides today in the Aeronautical Museum of Vigna di Valle, near Lake Bracciano. Furthermore, the Ribeira hydroport was a preferred destination of Italo Balbo, Mussolini’s minister of the Italian Air Force and Governor of Libya, who stopped here on the famous trip in 1930-31, when he led a fleet of twelve SM55s from Orbetello to Rio de Janeiro. If all goes as planned, a “Museum of the Atlantic Crossing” will be a prestigious addition to our neighborhood.

7) And last but not least, numerous meetings in City Hall have pretty much assured the first international expedition of our wonderful resident graffiti artists, Julio and Bigod. The city of Salvador will pay for their plane tickets to Italy! Salvador has an enlightened city superintendent, Edvando Luiz Castro Pinto, who has spearheaded an innovative project called Salvador Grafita, that treats street paintings as bona fide artworks, and provides paid positions to many young artists. Our boys plan to stay with Guido Daniele in Milan before their appearance at the Bahia Festival in Bassano del Grappa on September 29th, where they will create a new mural. Then they will go to Reggio Emilia, making a presentation at the local ARCI center, to Modena, where they will encounter school kids, and to Rome, where they will meet with the students of the American Overseas School of Rome, visit the ICBIE headquarters, show their works at Garbatella, and meet with Roman artists at the Forte Prenestino social center.

Julio, ICBIE artistMural by Julio & BigodBigod, ICBIE artist

And this is only a highlight of the many projects being planned. More exciting news will follow!

ICBIE Art Hostel Video on YouTube

Friday, August 17th, 2007

There is a fourth ICBIE video on YouTube, this time dedicated to our Art Hostel in the verdant back courtyard, where we host our visiting professors, guests, and socially-responsible tourists.  Now people who are considering a visit to Salvador can see what awaits them: lovely rooms facing out on a tropical garden full of banana and mango trees.  To view the video, you will find  a direct link in the Pages column on the right, or go directly to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZWJANHqcDNM.  Be sure to tell your friends to watch it, too!

ICBIE Art Hostel

Hapkido: An Instrument for Social Transformation

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

ICBIE Hapkido ClassICBIE Hapkido Class

The ICBIE’s development work with Hapkido - the Korean Martial Art of Personal Defense - has objectives that go beyond the teaching of the techniques of kicking, body twists and immobilization (the principal training characteristics of this art). Our deeper concern is that the students who practice it acquire a better quality of life, rather than an ability to defend their physical integrity. That is, that they learn to defend their ideas, their goals, and even more, their position in society. For that reason, as part of the coursework, we provide opportunities for open discussions regarding questions of security, of ethical and moral behavior, and how these comportments can influence, in a positive way, their rapport with their family and society.

“My complete and integral dedication to this work has been rewarded by seeing the significant changes that are happening in the lives of my students and their families. I feel useful by collaborating in the construction of a better world with better people.”

Professor Augusto Carvalho

Original version:

Hapkido - Instrumento de Transformação Social

O trabalho desenvolvido com o Hapkido - Arte Marcial Coreana de Defesa Pessoal - no ICBIE tem objetivos que vão além do ensino de técnicas de chutes, torções e imobilizações (principais características das técnicas treinadas nesta arte). Há também um interesse de que os alunos que a praticam adquiram qualidade de vida e aprendam a defender mais que sua integridade física. Queremos que aprendam a defender suas idéias, seus objetivos e principalmente seu espaço em nossa sociedade. E para tal aproveitamos as oportunidades em aula para abrir debates sobre questões ligadas a segurança, comportamento ético e moral e como esses comportamentos podem influenciar de forma positiva, suas vidas no convívio familiar e social.

“Minha dedicação em tempo integral a esse trabalho tem sido recompensada ao ver as mudanças significativas que tem acontecido nas vidas dos meus alunos e alunas e de suas famílias. Sinto-me útil colaborando na construção de um mundo melhor com pessoas melhores”.

Professor Augusto Carvalho

Prof. Augusto Carvalho, ICBIE Hapkido instructor

A New YouTube Video: Capoeira at ICBIE

Sunday, August 12th, 2007

As promised, the new video of last Friday’s capoeira exhibition is up on YouTube.  Nearly nine minutes long, it’s packed with amazing stunts from Mestre Pedro’s crew.  If you watch it to the end, you get the rare treat of seeing Pietro and Marlene dance the samba!  As before, there is a direct link in the Pages column to the right, or use the link

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3D2XELxfAYI

Please tell your friends about it!

Roy Zimmerman

buon ferragosto!!

Sunday, August 12th, 2007

ciao a tutti! Come sapete, in Italia il 15 di agosto rappresenta un po’ il culmine delle vacanze (o delle ferie, per chi ha un lavoro) estive. Tutt’altro avviene in Brasile, dato che da voi è…inverno (?!). Nonostante ciò, mancando pochi giorni al fatidico Ferragosto, voglio farvi giungere il mio augurio, che ovviamente è anche e soprattutto un augurio di ottenere i successi che meritate. Colgo l’occasione per ringraziare pubblicamente Roy per avermi dato notizia del blog e anche per aver inserito il link al mio articolo su Musibrasil del febbraio scorso. Con molta nostalgia per i giorni trascorsi a Ribeira, ma con la determinazione di tornarci presto, mando un abbraccio a tutti voi!

Andrea Zeccato

A Stunning Capoeira Show

Saturday, August 11th, 2007

Capoeira drummer

I’ve seen a lot of amazing things at the ICBIE, but yesterday’s performance by Mestre Pedro’s Capoeira troupe surpassed them all. At four o’clock in the afternoon, about twenty incredible artists, ranging in age from eight to sixty, transformed the open space of our future theater into the site of a stunning ritual of twisting and catapulting bodies, berimbaus, drums and spirited chants, led by an extraordinary man, Mestre Pedro “Pé di Ferro” (”iron-foot”). As the founder of the Associaçao de Capoeira Filhos do Sol Nascente, he has become a true hero for hundreds of families of the Alagados, a terrible no-man’s-land of shacks built on stilts over the All Saints’ Bay.

Mestre Pedro & Grandchildren

For several years, the ICBIE has profited from his friendship; he has helped us to recruit many wonderful kids, and our instructors and guests have had the unique opportunity of participating in his lessons in the roofless, burnt out ruin of a movie theater on the edge of the slum where he operates. (See the “Think Capoeira” link in the blogroll sidebar for more information.)

Yesterday’s show was arranged before the departure of the three social workers Maddalena, Lorenza and Rita, who have been our guests for the last fifty days. The breathtaking two-hour show was performed for a mere handful of spectators! Capoeira is a leading tourist attraction in Salvador, but the downtown performances are Disneyland-like replicas of the art, lacking the fierce intensity and total committment that we were so privileged to witness last night.

Mestre Pedro’s Capoeira kids

Still photos like the one above fail to capture the extraordinary vitality of Mestre Pedro’s group, but fortunately, I was able to capture about forty minutes of video, which I’ll be editing in the coming days, and there will soon be a couple of amazing new YouTube postings, so be prepared!

Roy Zimmerman

Yet another YouTube video!

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

Yesterday Pietro had to spend many hours making artistic contacts in downtown Salvador, so I took advantage of the peace and quiet to put together another ICBIE video.  After the virtual tour of the premises, (which has been viewed more than a hundred times in just a couple days), it seemed appropriate to deal with our central activity, the courses that we offer to the kids.  As before, you can see the video by clicking on the link in the Pages column to the right.  Again, please send the following link to your friends: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0iPu9HyEvjU.

Cinema, Sport, Music and Food

Wednesday, August 8th, 2007

The ICBIE is full of surprises, and the last four days illustrate the rich variety of experiences that animate our lives here. On Saturday we celebrated the third night of the cineforum with the showing of Schindler’s List, and about fifteen people showed up. We were curious to see how the locals would react to such a long and difficult film, in black and white, but, thanks to the plentiful supply of popcorn (supplied by Mary Norris in New York), nearly everyone stuck it out to the end, and the carefree Bahians were profoundly moved, even to tears, by the story.

On Sunday, Pietro and I went to the stadium to see a soccer game. The local team Bahia was playing a big match against Confiança in the Brazilian third division. About twenty thousand enthusiastic spectators put on a show of joyous abandon that rivaled the match itself, with supporters of the two teams mingling harmoniously, drinking beer out of plastic cups and enjoying the perfect weather. A few seats away from us, a group of young boys bashed on drums, providing a rhythmic backdrop that would delight the most serious ethnomusicologist, while the Bahia team battled to a victory that put it in first place.

Monday night was entirely different. Pietro, Marlene, Bogus, Rita (another Italian volunteer worker staying in our hostel) and I got dressed up for a night at the opera. We went to the lovely Castro Alves Theater in downtown Salvador, where the Bahia Symphony Orchestra, the Bahia Baroque Chorus and a cast of European soloists, led by the young Finnish director Valtteri Rauhalammi, performed Giacomo Puccini’s Tosca. The production was surprisingly good, with fine singing and a wonderfully capable orchestra exalted by the theater’s magnificent acoustics. After all the protagonists met their tragic deaths, we zoomed off into the night to a pizzeria.

The weekly Italian cuisine lesson on Tuesday featured ICBIE president Pietro Gallina, who, beyond his impressive academic qualifications is also a formidable maestro cuoco. We spent the afternoon scouring the ritzy neighborhood of Barra (where many Italians live) to procure the proper parmisan and pecorino cheeses, bacon and pasta. That evening a dozen hungry students and friends packed into the back kitchen to observe the procedures, with Marlene coaching the vocabulary and verbs, until the steaming hot amatriciana was ready to be devoured.

Amatriciana recipePietro ready to cookPietro cooking amatriciana sauceAmatriciana dinner at the ICBIE

Roy Zimmerman