Athens 2009
Athens 2007
Athens redux 2000
Athens 2000

ZeusColums

ATHENS-2009
We’ve returned to Athens specifically to see the new Acropolis Museum, a project that has taken over 10 years to design and build. It was originally scheduled to open for the 2003 Olympics, but then, it’s Greece. Things move slower here, mostly because as soon as someone sticks a shovel under the ancient ground, they find an ancient treasure. That alone could stop the project for a year or two; or more.
When we came here in 2000, we visited the old Acropolis Museum behind the Parthenon. It was a small dark building filled with small treasures in a very confusing layout. To be honest, the only thing I really remember from the old museum were the 5 Caryatid statues from the Erechtheum, imprisoned behind a layer of dull, dirty glass. The ones holding up the porch of the Erechtheum these days are copies. Four of them were in good shape and one was just a torso. There were originally 6 Caryatids. The missing one was taken by Lord Elgin in 1806 as a decoration for his living room. It now sits in the British Museum.


We returned to Athens in May of 2007, mostly to see the new Acropolis Museum. museumreflectionThere were signs all around the Acropolis Hill announcing the new museum would open in September 2007. Oh well, we had a great time anyway.
Last year, rumors of the museum hit the news again. This time the grand opening was announced for June 2009. They even had a website showing the building (designed and built by a French Swiss team). And sure enough, in June 2009 the museum finally opened. We pre-purchased our tickets on the internet for €1 each, a special introductory price for the first few months. You get a code number, the ticket window give you a entrance ticket. You can stay as long as you want. The man at the ticket window told us it should take 90 minutes to see the entire collection. We were there for 3 hours and only left because we had reached Acropolis overload.
The building is shiny and new, unlike anything else around it.  The exterior is covered with shaded glass that is so mirror-like, on a sunny day, it reflects an image of the Parthenon over the entrance. At night, the pieces glow as if they are lit behind a theatre scrim.

The walkway towards the entrance is made of thick polyglass panels and reveal the ancient city that was built up around the Acropolis hill, the same city ruins that probably held up the museum’s completion for 6 years. It’s really amazing to walk over so much history.
The Parthenon, Erechtheum, theatre of Dionysius and a few other buildings were all built around the age of Pericles and the Golden Age of Greece, between 500BC and 400BC. The community at the bottom of the hill is much older.
The first floor is built on an incline, giving you the sensation of walking up to the top of the Acropolis. On the way up you see examples of the pottery, votive offerings and family life. There is a “thesaurus” (treasure box) were friends would donate money towards the marriage of two people to help them start their new life. There is an Asclepieion, hospital where the locals worshipped Asclepios, the god of medicine and good health and his daughter Hygeia (possibly the goddess of good hygiene). Votives were given as worship and engraved or embossed requests were laid at the temple for specific aid. If you had a problem with your arm, you would leave a plaque with an etching of an arm, a hand problem called for a hand plaque. There were plaques of noses, arms, feet, heads.. Even though it seems like it  was a “make a wish” hospital, the Asclepieion did actually deliver medical treatments.
We came across an Asklepeion in Epidavros (see our travelogue of Peloponnese 2007) where the sick came for supernatural healing. After going through a purification procedure, the patient would offer an animal to be sacrificed. Then he’d be taken to a sleeping room (in a purified building), and during the night, while he slept, either Asklepios, his snake or his dog would visit the patient in a dream. When the patient awoke he would tell the priest his dream and the priest would interpret it and give him the proper therapy.
Hippocrates, the Father of Medicine, and the founder of the first school of medicine, was born in Kos (see our travelogue of Kos 2007) and set up his school and hospital at the Asklepeion of Kos.  At it’s height, the Asklepeion was administering medical aid to thousands of people from all parts of the Mediterranean.acropolis
The second floor of the museum has examples of the various types of marble used; Naxos, Parian, Porous and Pentelic. They all came from different parts of Greece and they all had different properties and used for different purposes; some for statues, some for columns, some for a frieze or metop and so on. There are also some pretty amazing sandstone carvings and ceramic pieces dating back to the 7th century BC, before the Archaic period (the Persian Wars).
One section of the 2nd floor is reserved for the Caryatids from the Erechtheum. They are set into the position they would have known when they were supporting the enclosed porch of the ancient temple. The scale is exactly the same at the where they once resided. This is the first time we have ever been able to see the them close up and from all sides. They are amazing. They’ve been cleaned and preened and look better than they’ve looked in a long time. Their frontal view is all very similar but the backs are all different; different hair styles mostly. There are the four very well preserved statues, the one that has been severely damaged over time and a very conspicuous empty space for the last sister, now is imprisoned in the British Museum, separated from her sisters for over 300 year. Yes, the Greeks are very eager to make the statement that the collection is not complete. There are many references to Lord Elgin and none of them are very good ones.
The top floor (4th floor) is dedicated to the Parthenon. This is a room a little bigger than the Parthenon Temple. In the center of the room is a exact scale of the pediments, the frieze and the metops, the three graphic elements that tell the story of the Temple of Athena. You can see the temple through the windows of the museum and you can only imagine how beautiful it must have looked when it was completed and fully painted in vivid colors in 490BC. Where’s Mr Peabody when I need him. The temple is supported by 50 columns that contain 16,500 pieces of marble. It a very clever design; the columns are slightly thinner at the top and they are slightly curved to give the roof more support. You can read more about the design and architecture of the Parthenon in our 2000 Athens travelogue.
The explanation of the Parthenon begins with a short film, which is very well done. The film traces the origins of the Parthenon and the story of the elements.

The metop panels (which once sat directly above the columns) is a series of copies that describe man’s struggles of life, love and society. 15 of the original 92 panels were taken by Lord Elgin and now live in the British Museum, something the Acropolis Museum will tell you more than few times. There are four scenes (for each side of the building). The main entrance metopes showed the battle of the gods and the giants, there was also the battle of the Athenians against the Amazons, the Sack of Troy and the battle of the Lapiths and the Centaurs. when athe King of Lapith invited the kindgom to attend his wedding to Deidameia of Eurytionas. It was a big event and he even ivited the Centaurs (note: never invite Centaurs to your party, it'll always turn out bad). The Centaurs got drunk and tried to (let’s just say) have their way with the women, including the bride. A fight breaks out and Lapith and Centaur go at it. Both sides suffer a lot of casualties.

The Frieze show the procession of armies and people coming to see the moment when Athena will receive the gift of the temple. There are 378 figures and 220 animals, food and wagons carved into the marble. Soldiers are racing to get there, but just as they get to a corner, someone slows them down. Hey, there are other people around the corner in the same procession. There are a few amusing moments in the festivity of the race to get the ceremony. The Greeks had a very good sense of humor.
In 1674 an artist named J. Carrey painted a very complete study of the Parthenon. Thanks to his artwork, the Archeological artists have been able to reassemble a lot of what blew up in 1687 when the munitions depot blew.

The Pediment is mostly gone. It has been reassembled with original pieces and filler. One side tells of the birth of Athena (she popped out of Zeus’ head). The other side tells the story of a contest between Athena and Poseidon. These are the two main gods of Athens.
The movie then gets into the story of the building itself. There was a large fire in 267AD. In 1205, it became a Christian church. The film shows a digital recreation of the new religious order desecrating  elements of the frieze, pediment and metopes, tearing at the them with hammers and chisels and tossing them off the Acropolis hill. I read a few months ago how the elders of the Greek Church was upset about the film’s digital recreation. They didn’t deny it was true, and they didn’t mind the reference of the desecration in the dialogue, but they were appalled by the digital Christians on top of the Parthenon hacking away at the temple. The Archeology commission was unmoved by the Church’s plea. The digital desecration remains.


musicianThe Elgin Marbles (also known as the Parthenon Marbles) include 17 figures from the Pedimants, 15 or the original 92 panels of the metope including the battle between the Lapiths and the Centaurs and 247' of the original 524' of the Frieze. He also took the missing Caryatid and a few other stautes and elements. It was quite a haul. There are 2 stories of how Thomas Bruce, the 7th Earl of Elgin obtained the Frieze and the Caryatid from the Acropolis Hill. One story says in 1806 he got permission from the Ottoman empire to remove as much as he could. The second story (and the one believed by most Greeks) is that he received permission to make sketches and rubbings of the reliefs. Lord Elgin told the Ottomans that he could get a better rubbing if he was able to move some of the debris out of the way. The Ottomans agreed. Unfortunately for the Greeks, Lord Elgin’s interpretation of getting a better view was moving them to London. He kept them for a while at his home and then sold them to the British Museum. The Greeks have had Poseidon’s Trident up their national butt for close to 100 years trying to bring the Elgin Marbles home. But the British Museum has been pretty headstrong and the answer has continually been “finders keepers, losers weepers”. For a while the British Museum said that the marbles were better off in London because there was no place in Athens to protect them. I agree that the old Acropolis museum might not have been a good spot to retain their preservation. But the new museum is an absolute pleasure. Everything is design for the preservation of the antiquities. Everything from the Pantheon to the Caryatids to the small pottery is so engaging and well displayed, even many British writers are saying that the Elgin marbles would undoubtedly look much better in here than in the British Museum.
But returning museum pieces to their native country would open a Pandora’s box of petitions all over the world. Would the Louvre give back things Napoleon stole from Egypt? Would the Pushkin Museum in Moscow give the Troy jewels back to Turkey? Would the Pergamum Museum in Berlin move to Pergamum, Turkey? Would the Reina Sophia Museum in Madrid give Picasso’s Guernica back to the Basque?  It’s a risky precedent. I think the Elgin Marbles will stay in London. Gretchen thinks the answer is for the British Museum to put a sign next to the Elgin Marbles that reads “On permanent loan from the Acropolis Museum”.
I have one more story about the Acropolis museum. There is a early 20th century Greek Deco houses that sits right next to the Museum. In the original plan, the house was to be torn down. The Museum needed the space. The owners were appalled. Not only was the house one of the best surviving examples of the early 20th century architecture in Athens, people were living in it. It has been occupied since it was built. The fight went on for years. The house is still standing. It was spared. There was a note on the wall of the Deco house (in English) thanking everyone for their support.
gigiceramicWe are staying across the street from the Temple of Zeus with it’s 50’ tall columns. About 100 meter up the street is the remains of Hadrian’s gate that once separated the old city from the new Roman city. We still can’t figure out how this worked. The Greek city and the roman city are totally interconnected. But the Arch does separate the busy streets of the city with the small streets of the Plaka, the Mecca of tourist crap and overpriced food. We moan about the chaos of the Plaka, but just like other tourists, we are drawn to it’s call. It is a lot of fun to walk through and watch all the people. Plaka waiters wave their arms at you like toreadors trying to pull you into the spell of the restaurant’s fine dining. Shop merchants shout at you to come in and look around. “We give you the best price”. Everyone has the best price. You can haggle the price, it’s expected in this culture. Usually you can get the item for at least 30% less than the asking price.

Our hotel is full of foreign tourists, most of them Americans. We all try to amuse the staff with some Greek expressions like good morning, hello, thank you, please and so on. One morning at breakfast an American woman said "Kalmara" to one of the breakfast waitstaff. The woman replied, "Kalmara is the fish, Kali Mera is good morning." And there you have it.
Before the 2003 Olympics, the streets of the Plaka were designated as pedestrian use only, torn up and resurfaced; some with cobblestone and some with long marble tiles. The cobblestones have held up well but the marble tiles proved to be a not so well thought out idea. Pedestrians in Greece include motorbikes, cars and small delivery trucks. Some of the tiles were repaired at first but it looks like the vigilance has been exhausted. New cracks arrive every day. Some tiles have disappeared completely and are replaced with a strange mixture of cement that resembles hardened oatmeal. It probably won’t be too long before they’ll just get paved over and return to the relaxed pre 2003 Athenian lifestyle.

Hydra
HYDRA-2009
It’s a 15 minute metro ride on the green line to Piraeus (the port city) and a 90 minute ride of the hydrofoil to Hydra, one of the prettiest of the Saronic archipelago. In the 70’s and 80’s it was home to famous celebrities. Leonard Cohen and Mick Jagger owned houses here. And where there are celebrities, there are celebrity seekers. An industry of jewelry shops and expensive restaurants built up around the beautiful horseshoe cove. The celebrities are gone (or at least well hidden) these days but the jewelry, clothing and cafes are still eager to swap a Hydra memory for your euros.muleTaxi  

There are no cars or motorcycles on the island. The only way to get around is by mule, the same way the locals have been getting around for the past 2000 years or so. The mule drivers are there to meet you as you get off the boat. In most cases it’s like taking a Pony ride when you were 6 yrs old, but we saw a couple of experienced riders whip the little critters into a pretty good gallop (if gallop can be used when talking about a mule).

canons
Hydra is one of the precious Greek islands that you read about; quaint small streets that climb up hills to nowhere, fabulous views across the blue Aegean Sea, an old fortress and wonderful fresh seafood.
Speaking of the fortress, there is a heap of cannons laying around the island like scrap metal. The Greek islands were always ports of defense since at least the 7th century BC,  In the 13th century some of the were fortified by the Crusades. In the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries a lot of them were fortified by both the Venetians and the Ottoman Turks. With the invention of the airplane, the fortress became a moot point. City walls replaced fortified walls, fortress castles became tourist museums. The hundreds of cannons leftover became municipal art and historical reference. We’ve even seen them vertically buried and used as traffic bollards. On Hydra they just lay around looking like salvaged junk. It probably cost more to move one than to just leave it there. We actually wish we could bring one home with us back to San Francisco.

 


We had a great walk, a delicious lunch, a leisurely ride back to Piraeus on the hydrofoil and we saw a really old sgigiLunchHydraubmarine floating in the Aegean. We couldn’t decide if it was emerging or submerging, but it looked like it had been submerged for the last 80 years. We’re always hoping to see a giant Greek sea monster or maybe even Poseidon himself every time we come near these waters. I guess the submarine will have to do.

We went to Corfu for 5 days and then came back here for yet another great walk in the Plaka. Another greek salad. I've been making the same recipe (tomatoes, cucumber, green pepper, red onion, olives, feta cheese, oregano, red wine vinegar and olive oil) for years. It's simple recipe and although they are always delicious, they never taste as good as they do in Greece.

We'll be back.