21

Garbatella

G intro

 

For week two in Roma I decided to head just south of the city centre and explore a neighbourhood called Garbatella. I guess it’s only a 30 minute bus ride from Pigneto but it may as well be on another planet. In fact, it’s different from anywhere else in Rome as far as I can tell, a planned garden suburb built in the 1920s for the working classes.

While it verges dangerously on the picturesque at times, its odd mix of faux ancient Roman and Fascist Modern, as well as various slaps of paint about the place indicating the political leaning of the community as well as their favourite soccer team, keeps it from being too pretty – or touristy.

Some background… Post-WWI, Rome needed to house workers. They chose a big patch of empty land on some hills south of Rome and gave a handful of architects a brief – design a village-type settlement similar to the English garden cities of the time, complete with communal areas and tillable land.

The result? A large assortment of lotti (lots or blocks), each different but similar, comprising of low rise buildings set around central courtyards, with medieval, Renaissance and Baroque motifs scattered around the joint.

The name may or may not come from Carlotta, a woman who ran a local tavern, whose nickname was Garbata Ostella (courteous innkeeper).

Okay, let’s meander.

 

Part 1: Country life

To reach the lotti you have to walk five minutes from the Metro, past depressing blocks of crappy high-rise. You know you’ve hit the spot when you suddenly feel like you’ve been transported back in time – or at least somewhere far from urban Rome. The streets start to twist and turn, lined with two or three storey buildings in various shades of burnt orange and pale red. Passageways lead to courtyards inside the lotti, where the apartments look onto communal gardens, some more loved than others, and an area filled with rows of washing lines. Residents relax on outdoor chairs, kids kick a ball around and cats drape themselves over pillars. And because it’s spring, the whole place is dripping with green, purple, pink and blue.

Tourists don’t know what they’re missing.

 

tree house

tree house

 

 

 

 

from another time - Anna

from another time - Anna

 

 

 

 

Lot No 21

Lot No 21

 

 

 

 

green Garbatella

green Garbatella

 

 

 

 

the arch

the arch

 

 

 

 

across the orange-red colour spectrum

across the orange-red colour spectrum

 

 

 

 

orange - Gabriella

orange - Gabriella

 

 

 

 

purple lace - Flavia

purple lace - Flavia

 

 

 

 

summer love

summer love

 

 

 

 

late afternoon light

late afternoon light

 

 

 

 

spotlight

spotlight

 

 

 

 

lazy days

lazy days

 

 

 

 

opposite directions

opposite directions

 

 

 

 

Part 2: Lotto 30

After our initial wander, we honed in on one of the lottiLotto 30. It seemed to be the most social, with regular groups of residents congregating in various corners of the courtyard for morning or afternoon natters.

On one of our visits we met 27 year old Cecile who lives here with her young son, Riccardo, and husband. She explained how the lotti work – if you’re not born into one you’ve got Buckely’s chance of living here. Most of them are owned by families who simply pass them on to the next generation to enjoy. For example, Cecile is the third generation to be born here – her grandmother was the first and her young son, the fourth. Will she stay forever? Maybe not as she loves the sea but…

 

 

family

family

 

 

 

 

watching over the kids - Cecile and friend, Francesca

watching over the kids - Cecile and friend, Francesca

 

 

 

 

roots - Riccardo, the fourth generation to be born here

roots - Riccardo, the fourth generation to be born here

 

 

 

 

star looks - Francesca

star looks - Francesca

 

 

 

 

The gardens here used to be well tended but are looking a little lacklustre now. But what I loved about the courtyard was the pride of place given to the rows of washing lines. They are literally and metaphorically the heart of Lotto 30.

 

 

love blossomed under the washing lines

love blossomed under the washing lines

 

 

 

Next to the washing lines we met young sisters Nicole and Rebecca playing with fellow resident, Sophia, and a long-suffering pink-plaited rag doll.

 

 

play time at Lotto 30

play time at Lotto 30

 

 

 

 

Rebecca, Nicole and ragdoll

Rebecca, Nicole and rag doll

 

 

 

 

The girls were busy making their rag doll as filthy as possible. When we visited the next day we found the doll had found her way into a washing machine and had been hung out to try – next to Sophia’s t-shirt.

 

thank god for Omo

thank god for Omo

 

 

 

the day before and the day after - Sophia

the day before and the day after - Sophia

 

 

 

 

Behind the washing, Marissa, Mirella and Rita had taken up their regular possie.

 

 

at the washing lines - Mirella, Marissa and Rita

deep in conversation

 

 

 

 

the power of three

the power of three

 

 

 

 

covered in flowers

covered in flowers

 

 

 

While we were there Anna and son Andrea, who we’d met a few days before, wandered in. She may only have come up to my waist but I still felt small next to her fierceness. Sweet fierceness that is.

 

 

Anna and son, Andrea

Anna and son, Andrea

 

 

 

 

87 years of use - Anna's hands

87 years of use - Anna's hands

 

 

 

 

sweet fierceness

sweet fierceness

 

 

 

 

I didn’t see many men sitting around shooting the breeze. I wouldn’t be surprised if they felt a little intimidated by the women of Lotto 30. Like Franco, who prefers to hang his washing out his window, thereby avoiding the need to venture down to the communal washing lines – and the signore.

 

 

hide and seek - Franco

hide and seek - Franco

 

 

 

 

Part 3: Holy smoke

There are a few churches in Garbatella, the largest one being the Church of Saint Francis Xavier. Built in the Fascist era of the 1930s, it’s striking for its lack of colour or embellishment – save for an appealing noughts and crosses pattern.

 

 

dramatic entrances - the Church of Saint Francis Xavier

dramatic entrances - the Church of Saint Francis Xavier

 

 

 

 

late afternoon

late afternoon

 

 

 

 

having a chat

having a chat

 

 

 

 

give me your hand and I will show you the way

give me your hand and I will show you the way

 

 

 

 

Now, I know little about the Catholic religion. So much so I had no idea that a major event on the Christian calendar, Corpus Domini, took place last Thursday all over Rome, with none other than the Pope presiding over one of the processions.

Well, someone must have said a prayer for me because it just so happened that the Christian folk of Garbatella didn’t celebrate on the actual day of Corpus Domini but waited until the weekend – on Sunday morning, when we happened to be at the Church of Saint Francis Xavier to take some final shots.

It seemed to be just a regular Sunday ceremony – until the entire congregation started to file out the door, led by two priests – one swinging a metal censer filled with incense and smoke, and another holding the Blessed Sacrament. I grabbed Coco and leapt off in hot pursuit.

 

the procession begins, past the graffiti

the procession begins, past the graffiti

 

 

 

 

must remember to pick up some more frankincense too

must remember to pick up some more frankincense too

 

 

 

 

What made it all the more interesting was that the evening before, Coco and I had seen the same streets being paraded on by an entirely different cast of characters – marching bands at the annual Festa per la Cultura.

Instead of nuns singing hymns…

 

 

take the next left my daughters

take the next left my daughters

 

 

 

 

we’d heard drums…

 

 

Garbatella goes wild

Garbatella goes wild

 

 

 

 

and saxaphones…

 

 

swaying to the music

swaying to the music

 

 

 

 

(We’d only popped our heads in briefly to the Festa per la Cultura – it seemed interesting but totally confusing as to what was happening where – hot and tired we left before it probably really got started.)

Anyway, back to Corpus Domini and the procession…

 

 

a superfluity of nuns

a superfluity of nuns

 

 

 

 

holy blue nails

holy blue nails

 

 

 

 

everyone was transfixed by the Blessed Sacrament

everyone was transfixed by the Blessed Sacrament

 

 

 

 

thankfully it was a car-free day

thankfully it was a car-free day

 

 

 

 

winding their way to the end

winding their way to the end

 

 

 

 

the procession endeth

the procession endeth

 

 

 

 

The procession wound up at a smaller church where everyone piled in for another ceremony. Waiting outside I descended on a few people who spoke English so I could quiz them about what we’d just seen as well as Garbatella in general. I was so busy talking to them I forgot to photograph the nuns as they left – but at least I snapped these two gorgeous things, the daughters of the families I was chatting to.

 

 

their duty done, time to eat pizza - Alessia and Matilde

their duty done, time to eat pizza - Alessia and Matilde

 

 

 

 

The Wrap

If Garbatella was an experiment in social housing, I think you’d have to say it worked. Although one resident told me she found it quite noisy at times because of the central courtyard, it’s precisely because of that design that it works so well. It acts as a shared outdoor living room, where residents meet to chew the fat, ask for help or just hand one another pegs. A case of architecture enabling relationships. Mind you, if you had a blue with someone it might just all be a little too cosy.

 

 

wilting in the heat - Garbatella's washing lines will be full tomorrow

wilting in the heat - Garbatella's washing lines will be full tomorrow

 

 

 

On the ‘home front’

I’m not sure if it’s technically spring or summer here – but it’s been hot, often hitting 29-30 degrees C. Nice if you are poolside but not when you’re pounding the tarmac, trying to engage potential subjects with just ten words of Italian up your sleeve.

My solution has been to make shorter but more frequent visits to the neighbourhood and always in the late afternoon. Which suits Coco fine – somehow we always seem to hit gelato hour when we venture out. And, terribly boring news for anyone except celiacs – they have gluten-free ice-cream cones here. Hallelujah! In fact, you can easily get hold of non-cardboard tasting gluten-free bread, biscuits and cereals in Rome – you just order them at any pharmacy and they have it for you the next day. Pronto.

Speaking of pharmacies and fast, Coco has an angry looking tonsil with an enormous white spot on it – I swear it appeared the moment I brought the maths books out. She’s taken to her bed and refuses to talk about quadrilaterals or parallelograms. Sheez.

This suburb has been brought to you by Belinda Radnidge

Seeing as we’re half way through our Rome chapter, I’d also like to say a big gelato-fueled ‘Grazie!’ to Rogerseller for sponsoring our time here.

See you next Monday.

 

10

Cihangir

C intro

 

For week two in Istanbul we’re ducking over the Golden Horn to a distinctly different world than the one we last visited. Cihangir (pronounced Gee-hang-ish), located in the Beyoğlu district, is the home of happy hipsters, intellectuals, Turkish celebrities and artists – well-off artists that is, who can afford the not inconsiderable rents.

Ten years ago the place was cheap. Then suddenly everyone realised that this was the perfect place to live – at one end, the entertainment district of Taksim, at the other, a ridiculously impressive view, stretching over the Bosphorus, across to Sultanahmet and down to the Sea of Mamara and beyond.

When the Istanbul Modern Art Museum sprouted at the bottom of the hill in 2004, it was a done deal. Cihangir was pronounced the ‘it’ suburb, rents sky-rocketed and the hipsters moved in.

A few facts before we roam. Named after a mosque that looks out over the incredible view which was in turn named after the son of Suleiman the Magnificent. It also means place of much stencil graffiti and cats, lots and lots of cats.

 

Part 1: ‘It’s where everyone wants to live’

So said someone we met on one of ours walk around the neighbourhood. While I can’t vouch for the accuracy of the statement, I suspect it’s quite true. Take Seval, for example, a woman we met while walking her English Setter at the local park last Sunday afternoon. While waiting to pick up doggie do, this is what she looks at…

 

Seval walkin the dog :: 1

just walking the dog :: 1

 

 

She lives just around the corner too. With a musician boyfriend. What more does a girl need?

 

 

Seval walkin the dog :: 2

just walking the dog :: 2

 

 

 

the Turkish mosque and the English Setter

the Turkish mosque and the English Setter

 

 

In Sydney terms, Cihangir is Potts Point glam mixed with Newtown grunge. While some of the European style apartment blocks are quite lovely, some are plain Janes. But all have nice steel framed doors. Who, I wondered, lives behind them?

 

 

definitely on the European side

definitely on the European side

 

 

 

she would probably live here

she would probably live here

 

 

 

surely he would live here

surely he would live here

 

 

 

he definitley lives here

he definitely lives here

 

 

 

before I made it big and moved to Nisantasi

before I made it big and moved to Nisantasi

 

 

Aside from great views and charming apartment blocks, the neighbourhood is blessed with some interesting second-hand shops, looking their best in the recent sunshine.

 

 

sun's out

sun's out

 

 

 

girlie

girlie

 

 

 

written by Goethe

written by Goethe

 

 

As with most of Istanbul, the women in Cihangir are a combination of bare-headed and scarfed. Aside from the lovely Tuba (pink scarf, second image below), those that cover their heads have been completely unwilling to be photographed. A reminder that as modern and western as Istanbul can feel, Turkey is still a thoroughly Muslim country.

 

 

living side by side

living side by side

 

 

 

you're scaring me

you're scaring me

 

 

 

Part 2: Cats

I’m a cat lover but the street cats of Cihangir are out of control. They are everywhere. But far from being treated as a nuisance, the local community looks after them, leaving bowls of water and food all around the place.

Still, I was really taken aback when I met Gulsum, a woman who runs a great local cafe called Kaktus. Not only can any cat wander into Kaktus and curl up wherever they wish, she has 60 of them living at her home. Sixty.

What’s also unusual about Gulsum are her facial tattoos. I keep my eye out for interesting tattoos but I’ve never seen any like these.

 

cat crazy Cihangir

cat crazy Cihangir

 

 

 

open door policy for any cat

open door policy for any cat

 

 

 

Gulsum lives with 60 cats - yes, sixty

Gulsum lives with 60 cats - yes, sixty

 

 

 

all the other blasted cats in this hood would disappear and I get all the fish

all the other blasted cats in this hood would disappear and I get all the fish

 

 

 

the winds of change in Cihangir

the winds of change are in Cihangir

 

 

 

Part 3: And yet

For all its alternative-ness and modern hipster ways, Cihangir hasn’t changed entirely. The call to prayer still bellows down the streets, summoning young and old to the local mosques five times a day. And the old fellas still hang out together, drinking strong tea out of tulip shaped glasses and chugging on endless cigarettes.

 

you must only wear socks when visiting a mosque

you must only wear socks when visiting a mosque

 

 

 

even hipsters have to pray

neighbours - the hip apartments and the mosques

 

 

There’s even an ancient Ottoman graveyard nestled between apartment blocks with the most interesting tombstones: you can tell the gender and rank of the deceased by the headdress. For example, men of high standing have turbans, lesser mortals, the fez. There weren’t any female tombstones but apparently you can tell how many children women had by the number of flowers decorating their graves.

 

 

tombstone hats

tombstone hats

 

 

 

nice turban

nice turban

 

 

 

280 year old flowers at Tophane Fountain vs day old

280 year old flowers at Tophane Fountain vs day old

 

 

 

We met Mr Handsome in the image below one morning and then ran into him again later that day. I call him that because I think he is handsome – but also because I have no idea of his name. I keep meaning to write a translation down, asking people for their name.

 

 

 

I'm sure he has, many times

I'm sure he has, many times

 

 

 

hanging out :: 1

hanging out :: 1

 

 

 

hanging out :: 2

hanging out :: 2

 

 

 

the old man and the ballerina

the old man and the ballerina

 

 

 

Part 4: Down to the water

I have two rules with this project. Stick to one suburb a week and avoid anything remotely touristy or iconic.

This week I broke both. Couldn’t help it. I started out as usual, documenting ordinary life in Cihangir. Then before I knew it I was drawn down the hill to the water’s edge, ending up at the Galata Bridge in Karakoy, a ten minute walk away.

I knew I was in dangerous territory when every second person seemed to be wearing a camera around their neck. Tourists. Eew.

I blame those views from the dog park in Cihangir – they made me hungry for more – as well as famous Turkish photographer, Ara Guler. I’ve been pouring over Guler’s images ever since we arrived in Istanbul and I particularly like his black and whites of life around the Golden Horn in the 1950s and 60s.

So to start with, three black and white images of my own…

 

the fisherman in the pinstripe suit

the fisherman in the pinstripe suit

 

 

 

and his mate, throwing a line

and his mate, throwing a line

 

 

 

catching a taxi home

catching a taxi home

 

 

 

fishing on Galata Bridge

fishing on Galata Bridge

 

 

 

kiss me you fool

kiss me you fool

 

 

 

three men

three men

 

 

 

one man

soaking up the sun

 

 

 

Salmon or Sea Bass?

Salmon or Sea Bass?

 

 

 

nuts for the ferry ride home

nuts for the ferry ride home

 

 

 

sky alive

sky alive

 

 

 

eyes the colour of the Turkish sky

eyes the colour of the heavens

 

 

 

the sacred and the suburban - minarets and street lights

the sacred and the suburban - minarets and street lights

 

 

 

saying prayers to get closer to God - or just not miss the ferry

saying prayers to get closer to God - or just not miss the ferry

 

 

 

The Wrap

It was so interesting to see a neighbourhood like Cihangir after last week’s living museum. Yet as modern-western and alternative as it is, the place is still so old Istanbul. I hope it continues to retain the old, especially those amazing tombstones.

And look, I apologise for sneaking in a little of the famous stuff. This project is all about capturing the ‘unphotographed’ but that view over the Golden Horn must have been snapped a zillion times. Hopefully I’ve got it out of my system and I’ll be back to my usual suburban self next week.

 

Coco's fifth hug for the day

Coco's fifth hug for the day

 

 

On the ‘home front’

It’s been an intense few weeks, the first time on the journey that it’s just been Coco and I; in Hong Kong we had friends and a ‘babysitter’, in India, family and a slew of home help.

Now it’s just us.

But it’s not the 24/7 glued-at-the-hip part that’s challenging. It’s the fact that I have no option but to take Coco with me every time I go out photographing.

It’s tough for both of us. I vacillate between thinking, what a great experience for Coco and, poor Coco, being dragged around for hours on end (and constantly hugged and cheek-pinched by well-meaning Turkish men!).

And for me, it can be very frustrating. I can’t move around so quickly. And I can’t stand still for too long either; sometimes photography is all about waiting, hanging on a street corner for an hour because the light is good or you like a particular background. You can’t do that when you’re with someone, especially a child.

It’s something I thought long and hard about of course when I was planning the trip. But until now I haven’t had to deal with it. All credit to Coco, she’s incredibly flexible and patient, but it’s definitely an issue that I need to find a solution for sooner rather than later.

Of course the upside is that yes, we are sharing a wonderful adventure. I just hope Coco remembers it like that.

This suburb has been brought to you by Karla Headon

See you next week.

 

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