Hello lovely peeps,
I'm finally home again! I arrived yesterday in the early hours of the morning. In the course of yesterday, I set the washing machine to work and I went to the shops to get some basic provisions. I also went to empty my mailbox and I found this lovely card from my friend Maggie:
It shows a 16th century fresco from Knossos called 'Ladies in Blue'. They certainly are very beautiful. (Look at their wasp waist line!)
Maggie and her husband are in Greece, on the island of Crete to be precise, where Knossos is.
The website of the Metropolitan Museum of Art writes this:
Excavated before 1914 near Royal Magazines, Knossos.
This group of three women was originally restored by E. Gillieron, designed on the basis of other fragments of frescos from Knossos, mostly of a much smaller scale. It has been shown that details of the facial outline of the "Cup-bearer" fresco, a reproduction of which is displayed in the exhibition, supplied the model for the faces of the "Ladies in Blue", which are not preserved at all.
This fresco reproduces the few fragments of burnt and abraded original fresco, represented as slightly offset from the restoration, and shows the extent to which the Gillierons recreated the scene. Extensive restorations like this one led the writer Evelyn Waugh after a visit to the Archaeological Museum in Herakleion in 1929 to state it is not easy to judge the merits of Minoan painting "since only a few square inches of the vast area exposed to our consideration are earlier than the last twenty years, and it is impossible to disregard the suspicion that their painters have tempered their zeal for accurate reconstruction with a somewhat inappropriate prediliction for the covers of Vogue."
This fresco reproduces the few fragments of burnt and abraded original fresco, represented as slightly offset from the restoration, and shows the extent to which the Gillierons recreated the scene. Extensive restorations like this one led the writer Evelyn Waugh after a visit to the Archaeological Museum in Herakleion in 1929 to state it is not easy to judge the merits of Minoan painting "since only a few square inches of the vast area exposed to our consideration are earlier than the last twenty years, and it is impossible to disregard the suspicion that their painters have tempered their zeal for accurate reconstruction with a somewhat inappropriate prediliction for the covers of Vogue."
The stamp also features Crete (Thank you Maggie):
The Lighthouse Stamp Society writes:
On 29 Jun 2023, Greece issued a mini sheet of 4 stamps with the theme “Traveling in Greece”. The stamps show views of Crete. One of the stamps depicts the inactive Réthymno Lighthouse located at the port of the same name on the north coast of Crete.
Wikipedia writes: Rethymno, or Rethimno, is a city on the north coast of the Greek island of Crete. In the old town, the Venetian Harbor is filled with fishing boats and lined with tavernas. Rethymno Lighthouse was built in the 1830s.
What's happening here in Spain? I flew back from Istanbul to Malaga (with Turkish airlines, which merits a mention as it was very good). My sister picked me up from the airport and I stayed a few days with her in Marbella. She lives a short walk from the beach, so here I am walking along the water's edge:
Below I am at my sister's, with my feet in the pool drinking a glass of something nice. I feel blessed.
I started preparing this blog (looking for the funnies) by the pool:
On Wednesday, before catching the evening bus home, my sister, her husband and I had lunch on the beach at a bar called The Hippopotamus!
Then I got on the bus which arrived at 01:15 in the morning. Then a taxi ride home and blissfully sleeping in my own bed (after a cuddle with Ronnie the cat).
That is all for today.
More news on Tuesday. In the meantime there are some funnies at the end.
Enjoy your weekend,
Lisca