Tuesday, 17 March 2015

Generosity it's our first priority

Message for the European Banks, for the British Museum, to the Louvre museum, the Copenhagen museum and the Museo archeologico of Palermo:
"la générosité vers la Grèce simpose comme le première devoir; ça n'exclut ni la rigueur, ni la fermeté, ni l'affirmation des règles solides. Pourquoi donc, les Banques, le musées musées qui possèdent des fragments du Parthénon, sont insensible à une forme intelligente et attentive de la générosité ?" 
If you like it share it, then translate it into your own language and share it again !
Greece Needs Love
Lots of love
Luca





Monday, 2 March 2015

Saturday 28th March 2015: put in your diary!

Dear friends of Greece, if you are in Athens on the 28th of March 2015 come at the Melina cafe' at 3.30pm. It will be an opportunity for all of us to meet each other!
GNL team will be there filming and interviewing Greek Artists in order to promote their talent worldwide.  Greece is a country that produce culture and contemporary Art in all disciplines, from writers, to dancers, painters, sculptures, designers, academics, scenographers and so on.
the address is:

 Cafe Melina
+30 21 0324 6501

Lots of Love from 
Greece Needs Love 

Returning the Marbles: an act of civilisation

In one of my stays in Athens this year, I had the honour to visit the Acropolis with Engineer Zannis (here with me in the photos). Being an Archeologist and working on the restoration of the Parthenon I had the privileged to hear directly from him, the progress of the restoration work, as well as the insightful stories that surraund the situ. I could see and fully understand the damages and vandalism that Lord Elgin perpetraited in 1801. He removed and cut 1/2 of the frieze metopes and pedimental sculpture, plus a caryatid and a column from the Erechtheion. He use these antiquities to decorate his mansion first and later sold them to the British Museum to repay his debts. It was the British Parliament that bought them for £35,000 and deposited in the British Museum.

Recently we watched on the TV News the ISIS (Islamic State) "soldiers" smashing artworks some more than 3000 year old. This recent events have been condemned as barbarian and inhuman and we all agree. But if we look at the stones that "lord" Elgin left on the ground after cutting the parts of his own interests, it is not too hard to make some similarities between these two barbarian acts. The only difference is that one was made for profit and leisure, the other for ignorance, fanaticism and primitivism.

Let's hope that soon someone will lead by example and return what was taken for pure greediness as Lord Byron said publicly numerous time!

Greece Needs Love