Saturday, November 19, 2011

First Semester Movement Final Performance

For the final assignment in our Movement Class for the semester, we each had to create a solo inspired by a photo from a collect our instructor had. We then had to find a partner and combine the two solos into one duet. Here are some photos of the final performance!

Jared & Sophie:



Taylan & Nicole:



Rowan & Chloe:




Dan & Scotty (photos by Fran):



Robbie & Mickey (Mortal Kombat!):




Renia & Francesca:





Saturday, November 12, 2011

Roma 4: Really Old Stuff

Day 2 in Rome began with Crepes with Nutella AND white chocolate, which is how EVERY day should begin. I was too distracted by deliciousness to take photos. Then a day of really old stuff was in store: The Colosseum, The Roman Forum, and the Paletine Hill.

To get there, a metro ride was required, on this awesomely graffitied train!


Here's the weird thing. The metro station is literally right next to the Colosseum. You walk out of the station and this is what you see:


And if you're terribly lucky like me, that is exactly when your camera battery dies. I was not happy. Boo.

On the plus side, I had my ipod which has a really crappy, but existant camera. So for the rest of the day I was able to satisfy my need to photograph, just with much less control and way fewer megapixels. Nevertheless, you can still see what I saw for the rest of the day:


Those are hallways underneath the floor of the arena. lots of little rooms, passages and places for lifts below trap doors. Pretty cool.

Here you can see some of the supports for the seating, which is obviously missing.

On the upper level there is a museum of sorts, with various recovered pieces. This is an actual gate that got pretty torn up when everything burned. But it's been around basically forever. Which is crazy.


The senators had reserved seating. And I don't mean a piece of paper taped to a chair. No, you got your freaking name carved into your freaking marble seat at the freaking colosseum. THAT is status.


Also, apparently graffiti has always been around in different forms. This is what ancient graffiti looked like.


Who needs spray paint when you can CARVE your graffiti? Ancient Romans were so badass.

One more view of the Colosseum:


Then we moved onto the Paletine Hill, which is filled with even more old stuff, around which you can wander.


And sometimes even climb:


Oh, you know, just chillaxin on some ancient ruins, like I do...

I think this used to be baths:


There was a little museum with some statues and things. This one caught my eye because it is the first one I'd seen that was clearly smiling!


Ok, here is where you're not allowed to judge. We'd been living in Italy for 7 weeks at this point, and though Italian food is wonderful, and endless supply of past and pizza can get a BIT monotonous.

So when you see an ad for Hard Rock Cafe Rome, it's hard to pass up:


It was possibly one of the most elation-inducing bacon cheeseburgers of my life. I can't describe how refreshing it was to be in a fast-paced restaurant with loud music, strong drinks, and the smell of barbecue sauce.

We DESTROYED an appetizer combo platter of buffalo wings, eggrolls, chicken tenders, potato skins, etc. Even the lettuce became a vessel for honey mustard...


And of course, milkshakes. Oh lord, the milkshakes. So delicious. Mickey almost cried with Joy:


Thus completes my Roman saga! In fact I literally when straight from Hard Rock to the train station and rode home full of greasy american goodness.

Rome was wonderful :)

Roma 3: When the lights go down in the city...

Aaaand we're back! At the recommendation of Rick Steves, we followed a "night walk" around Rome after the show.


The Trevi Fountain! It's epic. and just sitting there, in an arbitrary part of the city. Turn a corner and there is a giant fountain with tons of sculptures in front of you. crazy.


Had a random guy take our photo. Then he tried to convince us to let him take our photo with his polaroid camera for 5 euro. nnnnnope!


Seriously though, it's a pretty badass fountain.


And as is becoming a trend in our travels, Sophie gets proposed to...


Oh man I need to write these blog posts sooner after traveling. I can't remember what this building is called. BUT, we did happen to be in Rome the day of some big riots, though we were in a different part of the city. There were police EVERYWHERE though, and a bunch were already stationed here in case the riots spred to this building. You can sort of see the blue lights and police cars and such.


This was possibly my favorite statue of the trip. I don't know why but something about him was so captivating a lifelike. I wish a photo could capture it.


Pantheon. no big deal.


My fellow travelers. Aren't they good-looking??


Their crazy photo was joined by a clown/mime guy. Welcome to Rome!


I loved these doors, and in trying to take a photo of them, I managed to capture a major part of Italian life - rose sellers accosting you at every turn, even inside restaurants. This guy is on a mission and that couple NEEDS a rose for their evening stroll....


I really liked this portico. Don't know what the building was or who that guy is, but I'm very happy with how the photo turned out.


Aaaaand proposal number 2! For this one, Mickey actually DID buy a rose from a rose seller and waited for Sophie at the top of the Spanish Steps. So cheesy - er... romantic...


Finally, what would a trip to an Italian city be without some traffic-sign-graffiti?


One more Rome post to go!

Roma 2: Out and About

We join our hero outside the Castel Sant-Angelo, in Rome, where naive tourists take photos of men dressed as metallic cowboys and weird Egyptian statues. Shit. I guess that makes me a naive tourist... oh well...


I didn't give him money though. Because I'm a poor grad student.

Then we went piazza-hopping! Piazza Navona is hoppin', actually. And pretty.


This bird is grumpy and fits perfectly with the demonic fish thing it's sitting on.


There is some famous piece of art in here I think. I didn't go in. Chloe probably knows...


I was too distracted by these break dancers who just happened to be performing right as I walked up! ...


Oh wait, then they started performing again 10 minutes after I walked away. And apparently they were there a few months ago too. Which means they're probably always there and therefore I was not particularly lucky to see them...


Nevertheless, they were cool.


So are Roman streets. I really like them. Rome is awesome, has really cool buildings, and a generally cool and inviting feel.


This tree is determined. I like it.


We had tickets to see a production called "Can We Talk About This" by DV8, a well-established physical theatre company from the UK. Obviously I don't have photos of the show, but the theatre was gorgeous (yet dark).


And had a really badass chandelier and ceiling.


Tune in next time for Rome at Night!