This bust of a modern day boinero in a red leather jacket with black beret I found for sale on an auction site.
Saturday, June 20, 2020
Friday, June 19, 2020
Vigo's Murals
Vigo is a
city and municipality in Spain, part of the autonomous community of Galicia, located
in the Northwest of the Iberian Peninsula.
Mon Devane's
murals are a tribute to Galician tradition and culture. The faces of two
elderly men as they drink a cup of wine cover two huge walls, against a
magenta background.
The
paintings are based on the photographs of Óscar Vífer, portraying the people of
the neighborhood and meanwhile bringing out a smile to everyone who passes by.
Thursday, June 18, 2020
Sallah Shabati
Sallah
Shabati is a 1964 Israeli comedy film about the chaos of Israeli immigration
and resettlement.
This social satire placed the director Ephraim Kishon and
producer Menahem Golan among the first Israeli filmmakers to achieve
international success. It also introduced actor Chaim Topol (Fiddler on the
Roof) to audiences worldwide.
The film
begins with Sallah Shabati, a Mizrahi Jewish immigrant, arriving in Israel with
his family. Upon arrival he is brought to live in a ma'abara, or transit camp.
He is given a broken-down, one-room shack in which to live with his family and
spends the rest of the movie attempting to make enough money to purchase
adequate housing.
His money-making schemes are often comical and frequently
satirize the political and social stereotypes in Israel of the time.
Wednesday, June 17, 2020
Chaim Potok
Herman
Harold Potok was born in Bronx, New York, to Jewish immigrants from Poland.
He was the
oldest of four children, all of whom either became or married rabbis. After
reading Evelyn Waugh's novel Brideshead Revisited as a teenager, he
decided to become a writer.
In 1967
Potok published The Chosen, which won the Edward Lewis Wallant Award and was
nominated for the National Book Award.
The Chosen
was made into a film released in 1981, which won the most prestigious award at
the World Film Festival, Montreal.
His work was
significant for discussing the conflict between the traditional aspects of
Jewish thought and culture and modernity to a wider, non-Jewish culture.
He taught a highly regarded graduate seminar
on Postmodernism at the University of Pennsylvania from 1993 through 2001.
Tuesday, June 16, 2020
Cabane de l'A Neuve
The Cabane
de l'A Neuve is a mountain hut in the Swiss Alps at 2,735 metres above sea
level open for visitors.
The Cabane
de l'A Neuve was built as 'Cabane Dufour a La Neuvaz', in 1927 with a legacy from
Mr. Edouard Dufour and had a capacity of 22 beds at the time. As of 2014, it
has 28 beds.
The hut can
be reached from the Val Ferret. The hut lies below the Grand Darray (3,514 m)
on the south side in the Mont Blanc Massif. Other summits close to the hut are
the Tour Noir (3,835 m), the Grande Lui (3,509 m) and the Mont Dolent (3,823
m).
The hut is
owned by the Diablerets (Lausanne) section of the Swiss Alpine Club (SAC). It
is the starting point for alpine tours in the Swiss part of the Mont Blanc massif.
It is located on a small rocky spur with a view of the dwindling Glacier de l'A
Neuve.
Photos are from
it’s 75th anniversary.
Monday, June 15, 2020
Escargot

Dashka Slater is a journalist, a bestselling young adult writer, and a middle grade and picture book author.
Escargot is a beautiful French snail who wants only two things:
1. To be your favorite animal.
2. To get to the delicious salad at the end of the book.
2. To get to the delicious salad at the end of the book.
But when he gets to the salad, he discovers that there's a carrot in it. And Escargot hates carrots. But when he finally tries one―with a little help from you!―he discovers that it's not so bad after all.
Sunday, June 14, 2020
Pierre Jamet
Pierre Jamet
(1910-2000) was a singer (the tenor voice in Les Quatre Barbus), active
outdoorsman, and above all – the gifted photographer who so brilliantly
captured young French people enjoying their country’s hillsides, lakes, and
seashore during the 1930s.
Pierre Jamet
would photograph children and families on the roads of France, in youth hostels
and summer resorts, during the leftist political period of the Popular Front, late
1930s.
Jamet
actively participated in Léon Blum’s anti-fascist Popular Front, which swept to
power in 1936.
The Popular Front and the youth hostel
movement sought a “renewal of liberal political practice at the grassroots
level in response to the rise of far right movements and the economic crisis in
the early 1930s. The Popular Front was a combined revolt of the working class
against and the youth against a social order that prevented them from playing
any significant political role. The idea of youth, expressed through the
ever-important word Jeunesse, was endowed with a number of meanings,
both symbolic and real, and played a fundamental role in the orientation of the
Popular Front’s policies.”
The hostels
challenged pre-existing social and political structures, questioning
patriarchy, gender, race, religion and national identifications in a concerted
effort to reject fascism.
Saturday, June 13, 2020
Gabriela Mistral
Lucila Godoy
Alcayaga (1889 –1957), known by her pseudonym Gabriela Mistral, was a Chilean
poet-diplomat, educator and humanist.
In 1945 she
became the first Latin American author to receive a Nobel Prize in Literature,
"for her lyric poetry which, inspired by powerful emotions, has made her
name a symbol of the idealistic aspirations of the entire Latin American
world". Some central themes in her poems are nature, betrayal, love, a
mother's love, sorrow and recovery, travel, and Latin American identity as
formed from a mixture of Native American and European influences.
Her portrait
also appears on the 5,000 Chilean peso bank note.
Friday, June 12, 2020
Flea-market Zwolle
The beret (or in Dutch "alpinopet") may not be part of the regular street scene in the Netherlands, it sure dominates at the flea market in Zwolle.
Photographs by my brother Emile, the Beret Spy.
Photographs by my brother Emile, the Beret Spy.
Thursday, June 11, 2020
Emile, the Beret Spy (again)
Wednesday, June 10, 2020
Arthur H
Arthur Higelin (1966), better known under his stage name
Arthur H, is a French pianist, songwriter and singer. He is best known in
France for his live performances—four of his albums were recorded live.
Arthur H is an acrobat. He knows how to combine the most
demanding poetry with the energy of rock and the jubilation of pop. It takes a
lot of elegance, a lot of application, a lot of intuition. Arthur likes to take
risks. He takes pleasure in it. He searches for what has not yet been
domesticated in us.
Tuesday, June 9, 2020
Patrick Larcebal (4)
Last post in the serie on Basque photographer/painter Patrick Larcebal.
I am sorry to say it, but these photos show one shortcoming of a (small plateau) beret: the eyes are not shielded from the sun!
I am sorry to say it, but these photos show one shortcoming of a (small plateau) beret: the eyes are not shielded from the sun!
Monday, June 8, 2020
Patrick Larcebal (3)
Last week I posted on the paintings by French Basque artist Patrick Larcebal, known for his people portraits and street scenes in the Basque Country.
His photos too depict typical scenes in the French Basque Country (Bayonne); the old men congregating in the street, cattle markets, chatting and smoking.

Sunday, June 7, 2020
John Sadovy
Czech-born John Sadovy was sent to Budapest by Life magazine and photographed three days of the Hungarian revolution.
When Life magazine released six of his pictures to the Associated Press, they were run by hundreds of newspapers across the United States.
When Life magazine released six of his pictures to the Associated Press, they were run by hundreds of newspapers across the United States.
Later that year the images won the Robert Capa Award for
“superlative photography requiring exceptional courage and enterprise abroad”.
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