| Painting,
Tile Making & Poetry Workshop in the Southern Coast of Italy
Painting: Gail
Browne & Bill Papaleo
April 19 - May 1, 2010 [10 days] $2,500 (not including air fare)
Poetry: Peter
Campion
April 19 -
26 [1 week]
$1250
(not including air fare) Poets
have the option of staying the additional week and traveling to
all the wonderful places, being part of the group and writing independently.
This includes instruction, accommodations, breakfast & ground
transportation
Register
PAINTING:
The beauty of Southern Italy and the Amalfi Coast are a sensual
blend of elements that are perfectly suited for the making of art:
culture, history, mythology. Under the tutelage of Gail Browne &
Bill Papaleo, a 10 day workshop will be offered among the villages
of the Amalfi Coast which will include Salerno, Ravelo, Pasteum,
Amalfi, Cetara & Positano. This year we will spend the early
part of the week painting tiles and seeing how tiles are made in
a beautiful studio in Vietre, where they create 15 & 16th Century
designs. Each morning, students meet with their instructor for a
short talk and demo before beginning their own work. Critiques and
support are interspersed. After a 2 hour lunch, students reconvene
for a late afternoon session. Usually the group dines together (not
a requirement) at a local restaurant. One day is set aside for a
boat trip to Positano to work,. Workshops are individually tailored
to meet the needs of the group. Often students choose to stay on
for a few more days to explore other riches the area has to offer:
Pompeii, Capri, and Paestum.
Artist
Gail Browne is known primarily for her watercolors,
which reflect her unique vision of light and color. She is a third
generation artist and has been formally trained at the Cleveland
Institute of Art (BFA) and the Cape School of Art with Henry Hensche.
Gail owns and operates the Gail Browne Gallery in Provincetown.
William
Papaleo has been teaching and painting in Italy over the
past twenty years, while creating a bridge to the states through
his workshops and galleries in New York, Washington DC, Rhode Island
and Provincetown. Synthesizing classical and modern techniques,
his goal is to give students solid technique to free them to arrive
at their own individual voice. www.williampapaleo.it
Poetry Workshop Peter
Campion
In this workshop, we’ll read several poems (and a few prose
pieces) about Italian art and natural imagery. We’ll also
do generative writing exercises based on our reflection upon visual
art and natural imagery—all meant to enrich our understanding
of art through literature and literature through art.

Peter Campion is the Joseph Brodsky Rome Prize
Fellow at the American Academy in Rome. He is the author of two
books of poems, Other People and The Lions. He also published a
monograph on the painter Mitchell Johnson, as well as several catalog
essays on contemporary painters. His poems and prose appear in ArtNews,
The Boston Globe, Modern Painters, The New Republic, Poetry, Slate,
The Yale Review, and elsewhere. The winner of a Wallace Stegner
Fellowship, a Pushcart Prize, and a Civitella Ranieri Individual
Artist’s Fellowship, he edits the journal, Literary Imagination,
and teaches at Auburn University.
Ceramica
Vietri Scotto’s collection of tile is characterized
by the use of shiny glazes, traditional Neapolitan and Vietrese
decorations from the 15th and 16th centuries, solar motifs and colors
influenced by the Arab and Moorish cultures…all of which are
part of the history of Amalfi Coast. The collection includes tiles
with religious motifs and scenes inspired by the sea. Like in the
past, Daria Scotto and her husband Danilo Mariani prepare, press,
add detail and finish off each product by hand. The next step is
to let the products dry naturally to preserve the brilliant colors
and glazes. Their products come in multiple formats and colors -
allowing for countless creative solutions.
This is from the journal of the 2009 trip.
Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows: Italian Painting
Tour and other wacky
Tales from the boot!!!!!!
Castle Hill goes international....
by Sophia Salinger
Loren
Cherie Mittenthal, Director of Castle Hill and yours truly
Sophia Salinger Loren (artist, poet and board member) get ready
to embark on a three week Italian adventure. Please note that names
have been omitted to protect the somewhat innocent...If you want
the real story call Cherie or myself and take us out for a drink
and we will expound...
Here's only some of what transpired....
As the Grateful Dead once sang..."Oh, What a long strange trip
it's been." It had certainly been a long journey from Boston
via New York to Rome and then Naples...It always starts with our
new fangled and improved technology...we tried to print our e-tickets
from the new passport scanner machine, but, as luck would have it,
it was not to be...The Delta supervisor informed us that there were
delays in New York due to the fog and thunderstorms and we would
have to reroute our tickets...In his official Delta garb, he waved
us to the ticket counter....We unfortunately got the wrong woman...the
one who just started with the company, and told us there was no
bad weather in New York...We would be just fine. "Are you sure",
I asked in my sweetest voice your supervisor Glen told us there
would be four hour delays..."It looks like you're clear"
and handed us our tickets....bye, bye....
A ten mile trek across two terminals and five electronic conveyor
belts later, we finally got to the counter only to hear about six
hour delays in New York..."but we were just told everything
was clear." "Can you fly us direct Boston to Rome?"
"I can't help you now...please sit down and we'll call your
name." After a quick glance at the faces on line I knew we
had to take other measures...Cherie called our travel
agent in Provincetown and told him our tales of woe...after much
negotiating with a delta rep it looked like we were on the flight
direct to Rome. You have to understand that now all our plans are
askew...we are supposed to meet up with our group in Rome or Naples
to then drive to our first destination...meanwhile our bags are
already on a cart somewhere...they put out an all points bulletin
to retrieve our luggage...8 miles back to baggage claim and we are
sitting around thinking about what else could possibly go wrong
and like manna from heaven our bags plop out of the luggage shoot...
I knew it all sounded too good to be true...A group of ten like-minded
individuals sign up for the first international Castle Hill painting
tour. What could be bad? Eleven glorious days of painting some of
the most magnificent villas on the Amalfi Coast, savoring the fruits
of the sea, taking a boat to Positano, and sketching in the olive
groves. All of us, together, en masse indivisible by 10 different
flights, 15 different opinions, 9 meat eaters and 2 vegetarians
(more on this later). The tour of a lifetime. Right.
It is now only 9am. We have been up for five hours. Cherie and I
are waiting for several hours to fly Boston/Rome...I, in the meantime,
have bought every magazine know to man from "bird fancy"
to "gourmet" to "American Gladiator." "What
are we going to do?" Cherie asks. "We don't have much
of a choice...you want to read "bird fancy?" Once the
airport grille opened we were scarfing down chicken wings and guacamole
and really wanted some sort of alcoholic beverage but we had to
settle for iced tea...and it was way too early...
Finally, we are boarding...Hallelujah!!!! All snug in our seats...yes
seats, the plane is half full and we are in heaven...well almost...up
until the pilot announces we have door trouble...the door won't
shut all the way...Boston we have a problem. At this point, I basically
want to hang myself from the wing and we haven't even taken our
first flight yet.
Now, it is time for the vino...like the relief of an epidural during
childbirth...I don't care if we sit on the tarmac all day...I have
my mini wine bottle, my peanuts, my toxic airplane blanket and styrofoam
pillow...I’m set.
Fast forward...hours later...Roma...crazy airport...15 minutes to
make our connection to Naples...It has now become the amazing race....we
are rabid...running, panting, pushing over innocent bambini, and
grandmothers with too many plastic bags, we get to the gate...we
are greeted by the no nonsense Italian vogue airline employee...In
her most felliniesque face she informs us our plane has left...."but
we are here on time...we were delayed...there was a door issue,
i can't breathe." "Yes, I know you are on time but i am
sorry but the plane is leaving...you cannot get on the plane...you
will have to go upstairs (10 more miles by foot) and get on the
next flight to Naples." All of a sudden, my Italian school
day memories come flooding back...when in Rome do as the Romans
do or don't do...
Now it is in the morning on another day and I’m confused...While
on route to the new gate we pass mecca...a bar filled with the most
beautiful cheeses and fish and shellfish and vegetables and salads...this
is no Korean market salad bar...we are now in Rome, and we are hungry
and very thirsty and we missed our flight to Naples and we are going
to sit at this bar for three fantastic hours and eat, drink and
be merry. I am in an Italian food and wine trance...
it's time to board...we are now in Naples...home of the thin crust
pizza, Neapolitano song and crime...we get our baggage and find
the exit and there like a mirage stands our Italian Adonis holding
a sign that says "Castle Hill." We have truly arrived...
At 120 miles per hour, Michele our designated driver, is taking
us to Pontone a small village above the town Ravello on the Amalfi
Coast...It is sunny, hot and delicious and we realize we are no
longer in Kansas. As he points out Vesuvius and other items of interest...our
velocity is such that the human eye cannot absorb this information...I
practice my Italian...listen to Michele and Cherie in the back seat...
Consider
the lemon or the limone, as we say in Italian...In season, grande...a
coat of canary yellow, succulent, earthen flesh cradled in a prehistoric
skin...think of thousands of these golden pregnant beads shrouded
in a black madonna's veil...this is the fantastic image which enveloped
us as we made our serpentine way up the Amalfi coast to our first
destination, Pontone. The black nets protect the fruit...Michele
tells us, and in about a week all the nets will be lifted in time
for the limone Festival...sounds good to me....the car gracefully
wends its way up into the hills...we pass citrus groves, cascading
waterfalls of flowers and sea vistas that would make Homer proud.
Cherie and I don't even know what day it is...at this point, we
don't even know our names...we just want to shower off the airports,
sleep..oh, and of course, eat...
We spot Gail Browne...our trip leader and painting instructor extraordinaire...for
the next 11 days. She looks a bit perplexed....the room situation
didn't quite work out to her specifications...we are in front of
our apartment...Anna our apron clad hostess is so excited we have
finally arrived and even more excited that I can speak in her native
tongue...do we want espresso? you better believe it...
Her gardens are gorgeous, succulents, begonias, fava beans galore
and yes, the lemons...we end up shelling beans at the table with
Anna...she is our new pal...we love her and her most yummy espresso
with a perfect peel of lemon...I have never seen a cleaner kitchen...the
woman was born with a sponge.
It's time to meet the roommates and see our room...there are three
of them in our apartment each with her own room...One is too cold,
one is out painting and one has the grand suite and has already
rearranged all the furniture...then there are the two of us...we
stand in our room...yes, stand is the operative word here, because
there isn't much more room for anything else...It is clear now,
after travelling with someone for twenty some odd hours you either
like them or you don't...Cherie and I liked each other and we just
laughed at our tiny room with the beautiful view and rolled with
the day. I was too excited to sleep or shower so we changed and
went out to walk the town and photograph. Cherie took a photograph
of every square inch of Pontone...I couldn't believe someone else
was that into taking pictures...I had found my match.

8pm...dinnertime...we are going to one of the two restaurants in
Pontone for dinner...we now meet our trip comrades...we are all
stripes, ages, colors, we all love to paint and we all are very
hungry...we realize ordering with 12 people is an impossible, mathematical,
statistical nightmare...nothing a little wine can't fix...vino is
the glue that binds us...Pizzas arrive bearing artichokes and funghi...salads
of the freshest greens and grilled vegetables...we are all full,
happy and ready for our next day....we walk back to our apartment...It
is very dark...we already have forgotten how to work the outside
light that illuminates our decent down hundreds of tiled steps to
our bedroom...mission accomplished...a laughing attack ensues and
we are asleep.... the next morning we convene in the piazza to be
greeted by Raffaello, our resident cappuccino maker and dolce specialist...you
want to be on Raffaello's good side of which there are many...It
became clear that even though he was half my age a romance was brewing...so
to speak… In the morning before cappuccino you quickly learn
the personalities of your fellow travelers....we won't go into detail
(that's for another website) but suffice it to say, that one's true
colors emerge...the one who can't speak until she had slurped down
3 coffees, the one who just doesn't stop talking no matter what,
and the one who has ingested so many cornettos that she will roll
all the way down the hill to Ravello...and then wonder when we are
having lunch!!!!!
We are on our way to the Villa Cimbrone this morning...after much
discussion...2 vans, 2 drivers and many hand gestures later we have
entered Ravello the quintessential amalfi coast town, the one with
the famous postcard view of the two umbrella pines sheltering an
emerald sea...this time of year (april) is a wonderful time to visit
these magnificent gardens...wisteria is melting over statuary, poppies,
dahlia's, carpets of pink and purple flowers are everywhere....succulents
peek out from the wet rocks...we are truly in heaven...Gail gives
a watercolor demo and workshop and we go off like wood nymphs with
our brushes... once again it is time to eat...since I am the resident
linguist...I carry a bit of weight (literally) and feel it is my
duty to suggest a wonderful eating establishment which I frequented
on my last trip to Ravello...It is Campo Cusino the domain of Signora
Netta...Grand master of all things pasta and fresh...we embrace
and it feels like no time has elapsed since my previous visit...steaming
perfumed bowls of vegetable soup come marching out of the kitchen,
followed by sea bass flash fried with mint, wild greens, pasta with
funghi, crepes with ham and a bechamel sauce and pesto and clams
and it never stops...until all wine is consumed and we make our
way home...
Today is one of those stunning clear hot Italian days....the intoxicating
lemon blossoms have embraced all the air and we are stoned...light
shimmers on a crystalline sea...we are on our way to the boat to
Positano. As we glide along with the sun...the turquoise water hides
in grottos...we are all taking pictures and awaiting the town of
Positano as it spills into the sea...
Positano
is like a multi jeweled ring set into the cliffs....she wears every
color imaginable...we have some time to explore on our own, comb
the sand for ancient chards, grab a gelato and start to paint...me,
I am on a mission to find my friend Gloria of many years ago...she
is a local character so I am convinced I will spot her...as i walk
down a curved street…I see a shock of gray hair and come upon
Gloria...she remembers me and invites me to the table...Salvatore
her friend and fisherman...Is having a rendezvous with a new lady
friend and has marinated his freshly caught fish in olive oil, lemon
and garlic...he offers us a plate...It is instant fish karma...It
is the essence of fish... of the sea... of Salvatore...I am in love...I
want Salvatore to feed me fish every day...wait...I’m getting
ahead of myself...I’m in fish rapture... after soaking in
the Mediterranean sun...drawing on my pad in ink and colors...I
am one with the page...I am transported...I am Italian...I want
to eat....again!
Oh no another group meal!!!! we are all one now, we are all Italian...we
are tanning and burning and ordering and drinking beer and flirting
and eating polipo my favorite thing in the world...octopus in oil
and parsley and lemon and celery and pepperoncini...I never want
to leave...I never want to take the last bite...I am swimming now...In
the water...It is cold but the chill subsides...Cherie is taking
a film (see film clip) i am running out of the water freezing...dancing...laughing...
We are in the boat going back to Amalfi...we are sun-soaked and
tired and we go back to Pontone and have quiet time and walk and
photograph and wallow in the greens of the village.... we go to
the piazza for night time hang out...chat with the locals...have
pizza at the other restaurant in Pontone...we go to bed...we hear
furniture being moved my our room...we can't sleep...what is going
on...we are mad...but more at another time... we are up...we stagger
to the piazza for cappuccino...we imbibe...today we embark on a
journey to Amalfi...to see the glorious cathedral, eat some lemon
cloud confection to die for...buy pepperoncini on a string (no relation
to soap on a rope), see the resident paper maker, see the very old
sculptor in the park and eat once again, the most yummy meal of
the trip so far...If you can believe it...Today we are accompanied
by Bill Papaleo, painter and castle hill teacher...he lives in italy
and he is our fantastic liaison to all things Italian and fun and
scrumptious....Including himself...he has arranged this spectacular
feast of pasta and seafood, a wild foraged green salad in all its
crispness and bite on the tongue...some local white vino with a
bit of effervescence and perfectly sautéed fish with luscious
greens...then more cafe and a chocolate and whipped cream bauble
that is melting in my mouth right now...we all go for a walk...look
around and return for some rest... tonight is our festa...up at
the villa...I have to reiterate the UP part....UP is five hundred
million stone medieval steps of varying height and crumbliness...this
is no paved highway...there is no elevator to the villa...we are
trudging up but then i start to think about all the wine and food
and dancing at the villa (see video clip) and i can't imagine coming
down these steps at some god forsaken hour, half in the bag...we
get to the villa we need oxygen...we hear Brazilian music...a group
from Naples...a wonderful singer...we dance and play guitar and
have a cake and knife dance and eat and drink and play the magnum
of champagne (see clip)...
now it is tomorrow and we are hung-over...I can't take one more
medieval step...every bone in my body aches...I have tendons and
muscles i didn't even know existed...I need rest...I need cappuccino...I
need amore i am sad we are leaving...I have to say goodbye to Anna
and Raffaello and all our other town friends...
It’s o.k. cause I’m coming back in October...I look
forward to seeing them all again...In the darling town of Pontone...
after many long goodbyes we pack into the vans and head out to Terravecchia
our next destination for six days. Terravecchia is a medieval village
of 51 inhabitants and is currently being restored by our friend
Gregorio. Gregorios ancestors have lived in this town for hundreds
of years and he is lovingly documenting the history of the town
and rebuilding these magnificent dwellings. Terravecchia lies in
the ancient olive groves and is surrounded by fertile farmland rich
with volcanic soil.
On our way, we stop at a tiny market filled with incredible goodies
fresh mozzarella, olives, roasted peppers, wild strawberries and
other delicacies we get to the town and start our picnics immediately.
We are greeted by Gregorio and his childhood friend Franco who is
the poet, chef and all around bon vivant in residence we all get
situated and this time Cherie, myself and Catherine all share a
palace of several rooms each equipped with four beds a kitchen,
dining area and fireplace, two bathrooms and radiant heat we learn
to love radiant heat especially in the cold mornings
Some of us meander off and explore the town Cherie and I walk through
the olive groves with the sensuous pink and green netting we come
upon Constantine who is a close friend of Gregorio and a photographer
he beats the bushes with his walking stick foraging for wild asparagus
I try to tell him about Euell Gibbons but I have no luck.
Later
that day, we all go to the one and only restaurant to have dinner
Angelina our chef has issues there are no substitutions on her menu
it is what it is. You don’t make waves with Angelina she thinks
we want Americano/Italiano food but she doesn’t know the palettes
she’s dealing with we do get a fairly good pasta e fagoli
one night but we quickly see that breakfast is the only way to go
with her.
We are on our way to Scala outside of Terravecchia higher in the
hills in the fall, there is a wonderful chestnut festival Scalas
architecture is more reminiscent of northern Italy than the south
we perch ourselves on a wall and watch a very serious bocce game
played by the octogenarians of scala. Like bowling, in the states,
each man has his own bocce style it’s our afternoon entertainment.
In my mind, all days become one. There is the day of painting the
lava cliffs in the olive groves a dry, warm day my ass on a hard
rock falling asleep lizards scampering around me, fortunately no
black snakes.
A luscious day to Paestum to paint the Greek ruins the rocks baking
in the sun getting lost in the rubble photographing and finding
a secret crypt where I daydream among the faded frescoes the Paestum
museum with one of the most elegant collections of painted sarcophagi
writing is a hollowed out stone seat. These moments will last with
me forever.
We
are in for an amazing surprise from Paestum we walk over to the
water buffalo and organic farm where the make the fluffiest mozzarella
on the planet this is water buffalo central and Cherie our animal
lover to the max is in love. She proceeds to photograph every snout,
horn and hair of these majestic creatures some of us check out the
organic farm and all the artichokes sprouting in the fields we return
to find Cherie rolling in the mud with the buffalo it wasn’t
pretty at the farm, there is a caf that sells guess what??? A lunch
of all the fresh cheeses, meats, olives, salad and perfectly charred
hearty bread this is la dolce vita.
Its time to look through the kitschy souvenirs ancient fragments
of ruins for only five dollars totally authentic, augustus erasers,
erotic postcards and much more full stomachs full shopping bags
we board the bus back to terravecchia.
That
night we are dancing to Catherines Ipod all the music we danced
to in the 70s and 80s..Its lots of fun we light a fire and run around
our immense new house with the radiant heat. I compose a shrine
in my room out of all my new knickknacks (photos to follow)we color
and drink beer.
For additional details email Sophia Salinger at bakedmashedfried@yahoo.com
for an appointment
Hear about the groovy ceramic factory in Vietri Salivate about
our pasta and clams Shop with us for pottery and trinkets.
Hear about our lost tour participant in a trance on a street corner
of Salerno.
Check out the enormous cherubs.
The three gals who rock Pompeii
Franco really does speak Italian.
Shop for chocolate.
And many other fun things.
Like drawing in the medical botanical gardens of Salerno with the
school kids How to shop in an Italian supermarket like an Italian
and not an American read the labels!!!!!
But wait, there’s more, the largest olive in Naple Show to
tie dye a tee-shirt with olive juice and other fun crafts.
I leave you now with the surreal images of our final festa true
Fellini movie(see clip) I have been spending the day gathering natural
elements for my festa headdress, a construction of artichokes, fava
beans, ribbon, peppers and food labels, tonight is the big night,
the final blowout
Gregorio and Franco are the festa masterminds, at about 5pm Italian
time they are going food shopping meanwhile, the original festa
location has been changed to another apartment next to our house,
this at first causes quite a bit of commotion but isn’t that
the Italian way?? So thinking the festa is still in our digs we
host the pre-party, all our food from various travels with plenty
of beer and wine, we are all now smashed and I haven’t even
gotten my head gear in order. Olive branches are flying, bobbie
pins breaking, fava beans spiltting, I’m not having a good
hair day, my luck starts to change and before I know it I have a
verdant still life balanced on my head
The party hasn’t started it is 8pm, no sign of Gregorio or
Franco, food bags piled up in the wild tiled kitchen, no trace of
them anywhere, guests start to arrive. A vat of wine is brought
out, the bacchanalia begins!!!!!
Cherie and I do a Madonna photoshoot in an abandoned bedroom with
a wrought iron bed frame (see clips)
The wine has been flowing for an hour, no food in site, in the
distance. The smell of sausages barbequing in our fireplace, I am
ravenous. This is the best sausage I have ever eaten, perfect fat
to meat ratio, the right snap, this is from someone who comes from
a long line of sausage eaters. I have been transported to the fields
and mountains of my ancestors. We have kerchiefs on and are pounding
the grapes for the harvest.
Back at the festa.
It is now 11pm and Franco is totally ensconced in the kitchen.
He dons a floral apron and silly chefs hat and he is smoking and
drinking and stirring the pasta we are gorging ourselves with mozzarella
balls and prosciutto pasta next with tuna sauce that Gregorios wife
made earlier, please note that Gregorios wife does not attend this
party, more meriiment, 1am, franco and I are in an Italian movie.
I am now wearing an apron..my cleavage in full view, I have a cigarette
dangling from my lip and I’m serving food, it is the 60s I’m
Sophia he is Marcello, he is peeling grapes and I’m stirring
the insides of our future cannolli’s, we are a match made
in Italia.
The party has dwindles down to 7 of us, it is 3am, I don’t
know where I am. I am reclining on a Italian wicker love seat, my
feet in the air my vegetable headgear in tatters, a glass of vino
in my hand, I see you through the green glass of a wine bottle you
are melting no dripping Who am i????
We are dancing and singing and we have a birthday surprise for
Phyliss, the guitars come out and tears are shed all out of pure
joy for savoring all these wonderful moments together the 12 of
us have put aside our quirks and embraced one another for 2 weeks(don’t
get me wrong the quirks certainly added color)and now this is the
culmination of many laughing attacks and hundreds of wine bottles
and thousands of bright moments which will stay with us for many
days and many new friendships to boot!!!!
Ciao,
Sophia
Sophia Salinger is a resident lover of life, artist, performer,
hat maker, entertainer, gourmand extraordinaire just to name a few
things. She can be reached at bakedmashedfried@yahoo.com or check
out her website: www.bakedmashedfried.com
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