Friday, March 28, 2008

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Sum of Us

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Together



Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Pole dancing, moments of grace and disgrace


Miss Poledance Australia 2006


Belgian model teaches Belgian actress to poledance.


Face first on stage


On the top of the pole, male gymnast (Dmitry Bulkin)


Male pole dancer training


CyBC (Cyprus Broadcast Cooperation) promotes poledancing

Monday, March 10, 2008

A very clean Monday for very dirty souls

... the day after






... every year it feels like doing the same thing again ...

“Limassol’s grand carnival parade is the most significant event of the year as regards the public’s participation. 13 February 2005: In collaboration with the Limassol Municipality’s Refuse Collection Department and the island’s Health Services, 80 street-sweepers collected – after the celebration – two tones of confetti from the 4km-long central thoroughfare of the city. The confetti was taken to the Nicosia Municipal Centre. Through this attempt to make the celebration one’s own, and the transfer of both the collective and the personal act, one endeavors to present a poetical deception of the absence and an abstract recording of the exceptional.” (Extracts from the exhibition exhibition catalogue - Accidental Meetings where the work Sunday was presented). Photo of the installation

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Last day of the carnival


Boy walking up the Makarios Avenue, before the Sunday Grand Parade begins. (1992, from the Municipal Archives)

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Dalida - Mourir sur scène

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Viens, viens

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Viens

Sunday, March 2, 2008

"Edo Lemesos. Edo Lemesos, sto trello sas proskaloume Karnavalli"

I have been visiting lately the municipal archives of my city every day (and still do). Looking in dusty unorganized albums, I have collected a number of photos which had a strong impact on me but which are not relevant to the narrative of my new slide show "Wonder Land" (80 color slides in loop, presented in Arco Madrid and now in the Unfair Fair in Rome). I thought of sharing them by posting here a small selection. Since last thursday and until next monday it is carnival period in Limassol and I try once more to understand what keeps me, since my childhood, in such a safe distance from this social event, confused somewhere between rejection and admiration.




City decorations from the 80s and early 90s.




The entrance of the "King of Carnival" (Vasilia Karnavalos) is the official opening of the carnival events. On Tsignopempti (Mardi-Gras) the carriage enters the old city. Loula Seyssmith was the queen of the carnival, the one who made the statue of the King of Carnival and the one sitting next to him every year. I always remember her to be silent and lonely like in the picture. The year before she died, vandals burned the King of Carnival. She took the decision to open the carnival parade with the burned carriage. Brave and Morbid; the best thing ever happened in the Carnival







On the same day there is the shaving-cream and eggs "fight". I have never felt comfortable to participate, but I always like to go after with the cleaners. The "fight" happens in the shopping street of the city, the shops windows are completely wasted and the street smells like hell. In the past the police tried to control the event (see the photo of the police car full of stuff) but nowadays it gained its place in the official carnival events. The photos are from the end of the 80s.




When I was a kid I remember together with the Police Band and the Municipal Band to have the British Army Band (from the British Base in the Island), but not any more. Don't know if they have left or been kicked out in the process of decolonization of the carnival (from the few photos I found before the 60s most of the carriage themes were about British projections and imagery). Hope we will keep the King though (and even better burned)...



"Les Marjorettes" dressed in red always accompany The Kind of Carnival and open the Big Parate of Sunday!




Also every year there is at least one group dressed as Hawaiian girls.




Tsirio Stadium used to be the place where the Children Parade use to happen every first sunday of the Carnival. Nowadays unfortunately it take place in Anexartisias street