Older Dutchman watches the people at the Waterlooplein flea market in Amsterdam, 1971. The Dutch word for 'beret' is 'alpino'; taken -wrongly- from the Italian mountain troops who wore nothing like a beret.
But then, the description 'Basque beret' is all based on a stupidity by Napoleon who thought the Basques were the inventors of the beret.
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Monday, April 29, 2013
Beret Burning in Thionville
The burning happens in the summer of 1940, in the centre
of Thionville. During WWII, the French region of Lorraine was placed under a German civilian
administration and was thus unofficially part of the German Reich. Names were
Germanized; on the Market Square ,
a sign indicates "Marktplatz". Visible are the (French) Hitler Youth recognizable
by its banners bearing the SS runes. On either side, are the members of the
German Volksgemeinschaft (DVG), the German People's Union ,
which hold swastika flags. Books by the Alsatian illustrator Hansi (author of
anti-German cartoons) are burned, and berets, the symbol of French patriotism.
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Gerhard Thieme
Gerhard Thieme (1928) is a German sculptor, whose sculptures take a prominent place in the Berlin cityscape.
As a youth, Thieme learned woodcarving and later studied pattern (textile) design.
"Waffenbrüder" ("Brothers in Arms")
From 1948 through 1952 he studied Fine and Applied Arts,
first in Dresden , later in Berlin . He travelled on study tours to
(then) Czechoslovakia , Poland , Hungary
and the USSR .
For the party and state leaders of the GDR Gerhard Thieme produced numerous
awards and also gifts for guests, such as small reliefs of Karl Marx, Friedrich
Engels and Ernst Thalmann.
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Trifón Cañamares
Centenarian and life-long (beret wearing) activist Trifón Cañamares has
been an active member of the PCE (Spanish Communist party) since 1936.
During the Civil War he was a political commissar with
the 12th Division of the Army's IV Corps.
Cañamares served 7 years in prison, after Franco's crush
of the Republic, but never gave up the struggle. After his time in prison, he
helped re-organize the (illegal) PCE and continued the anti-Franco fight.
Trifón Cañamares is still a familiar sight at
demonstrations for justice and equality.
Friday, April 26, 2013
Bernardino Graña
Beret wearing poet and writer Bernardino Graña (Cangas do Morrazo, 1932) worked as a secondary education teacher of Galician Language and Literature until his retirement in 1991.
He was a member of the Editorial Board of the poetic magazine Alba since his early youth and contributed to the literary magazines La Noche and Faro de Vigo, besides writing essays for a number of publications.
In 1958 he was one of the founders of the group Brais Pinto, in Madrid, and he was one of the creators and the first president of the Asociación de Escritores en Língua Galega (AELG).
All his work is written in Galician.
He was a member of the Editorial Board of the poetic magazine Alba since his early youth and contributed to the literary magazines La Noche and Faro de Vigo, besides writing essays for a number of publications.
In 1958 he was one of the founders of the group Brais Pinto, in Madrid, and he was one of the creators and the first president of the Asociación de Escritores en Língua Galega (AELG).
All his work is written in Galician.
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Patricio Falconi Almeida, con Boina
Patricio Falconi Almeida is an Ecuadorian poet. Falconi's
book La Costilla de Don Quijote (2000;
Don Quixote's Rib) is a single long poem (or, depending on how you choose to
read it, a sequence of very short poems) of love, directed to an unnamed woman.
In the opening lines, the poet invokes his beloved and states that she comes,
not from Adam's rib, but from that of D.Q.
There is only a single additional reference to D.Q. in the
poem, but given the title metaphor and the prominent placement of the concept
in the text, the suggestion is, perhaps, that the woman is the poet's ideal, an
ideal inspired in D.Q.'s love for Dulcinea.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Le Jeu de Quilles de 9 / 9 Pin Skittle
The origin of the nine pin skittle game is still unknown.
It used to be played in the county
of Béarn in the 15th and
16th centuries and it became popular in the whole South West of France in the
19th century.
It was brought to America by French emigrants.
The first important nine pin skittle competition took
place in Dax in 1898 and other competitions followed in the South West of
France.
The French nine pin skittle federation was created in
Orthez (Atlantic Pyrenees) in 1948.
It is now part of the F.F.S.Q. (the French Skittle
Federation), now called the F.F.B.S.Q. (the French Skittle and Bowling
Federation).
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
109 Year Old Beret Wearer
Arévalo Garijo Innocent died on March 31, 2011 at the age
of 109. Arévalo Garijo was named the 'grandfather of La Rioja'.
He was the oldest person of La Rioja and one of the oldest
men in Spain
(there are only three other people aged 109 in Spain).
Often asked about his secret to living so many years, he
always answered the same " through God, there is no secret" and added
that "every day, every morning, the first thing I do when I wake up is have
a drink of water".
Monday, April 22, 2013
Dick Ket with Beret
Dick Ket (1902 – 1940) was a Dutch magic realist painter
noted for his still-life paintings and self-portraits.
While Ket's earliest paintings are impressionistic in
style, he was influenced decisively by the art of the Neue Sachlichkeit in
1929, and thereafter painted in a magic realist style.
His meticulously composed and rendered still lifes
feature favorite objects such as bottles, an empty bowl, eggs, and musical
instruments. Ket juxtaposed these objects in angular arrangements, seen from a
high vantage point, their cast shadows creating emphatic diagonals.
These
compositions reveal the influence of cubism as filtered through the posters of
Cassandre, which are frequently depicted in Ket’s paintings. Another source of
inspiration came from early Netherlandish painting, which Ket admired for its
atmosphere of austere reverence that he called its quality of
"intrusiveness".
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Barraban
'Barraban' is one of the old labels that still show up every now and then; in a vintage beret at an auction or on posters or postcards - Barraban had some great artwork made for their beret promotions.
Jean-Pierre Barraban was the founder of the Barraban Berets Factory in 1792 (so well before Blancq-Olibet, the oldest beret manufacturer still in operation since 1819) . He was born in Abos on March 25, 1770 and died October 30, 1840 in Oloron Sainte Marie, the "beret capital" of the world.
His successors continued the business until it's closer in the 2nd half of last century.
.
Jean-Pierre Barraban was the founder of the Barraban Berets Factory in 1792 (so well before Blancq-Olibet, the oldest beret manufacturer still in operation since 1819) . He was born in Abos on March 25, 1770 and died October 30, 1840 in Oloron Sainte Marie, the "beret capital" of the world.
His successors continued the business until it's closer in the 2nd half of last century.
The shelter of the pedestrian link was made with
the frame of the old factory Barraban
On the place where once the factory stood, you'll find a semi-covered car park; the frame and roof parts of the original factory building.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
Legazpi Cheese Making Competition
In Legazpi, in the (Spanish) Basque Country, on September
4, Shepherd Day was celebrated with cheese tastings and markets, a sheepdog
championship and sheep shearing competition, exhibitions, demonstrations of
traditional methods in cheese production and music.
The 27th edition of the Guipuzkoa Cheese Contest was won
by Mikel Etxezarreta and Eli Arrillaga, who were there to present their
'Aizpea' cheese, produced in February at their dairy farm in Olaberria.
The winners of the cheese contest all receive a txapela.
Friday, April 19, 2013
More Spanish Comics: Agamemnon
Agamemnon is a headstrong young fellow, a simple and
strong country lad - always wearing a black beret, designed by Alejandro Santamaría Estivill.
Comics were generally written in the city, by city
dwellers and consumed in the city. Yet, Spain was, until the nineteen
seventies, a predominantly rural country. But, agriculture and rural Spain had very
little presence in the comics at the time - that changed with Estivill's
Agamemnon.
No translations in English available, to the best of my
knowledge.
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Come Fly with Me Nude
Performance artists Dom Casual & Bella Hagen are caught in an existential schism between keeping it real in San Francisco or selling out in Hollywood in this story about art, berets, and finding your muse.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Tetsugen Bernard Glassman
Bernie Glassman, aka Tetsugen Bernard Glassman, is an
American Zen Buddhist roshi and co-founder of the Zen Peacemakers, an
organization established in 1996 with his late wife Sandra Jishu Holmes.
Bernard Glassman was born to Jewish immigrants in Brighton Beach ,
Brooklyn , New
York in 1939.
In the early 1960s, Glassman began meditating and soon
after sought a local Zen teacher. He found Taizan Maezumi in Los Angeles , California
and Glassman became one of the original founding members of the Zen Center of
Los Angeles.
In 1982 Glassman opened Greyston Bakery in Yonkers , New York ,
an effort to help alleviate the widespread homelessness in the area. The bakery
provided jobs for inner city residents who lacked education and skills. The
proceeds helped to fund what he called the Zen Community of New York.
Glassman has become known for his many "street
retreats." Author James Ishmael Ford writes, "...'street retreats,'
for instance, moves 'sesshin' into the streets: participants eat in soup
kitchens, and, if they know they're not displacing homeless people, sleep in
homeless shelters or, otherwise, sleep in public places. Zazen takes place in
parks and dokusan in alleys."
Monday, April 15, 2013
War Resisters
Handmade Peace beret, available here.
As closely related berets & the military may be, so are berets and pacifists/conscientious objectors/war resisters. Somehow, people with a desire for non-violence and peace tend to gravitate toward the beret. That was true for the interbellum and still is these days, as the pictures below show.
"Out of Iraq", White House, Washington DC
Students at UC Santa Cruz successfully rallied to force
military recruiters off of the campus. March 5, 2005.
Tomas of the Brown Berets spoke to the crowd and got them fired up.
Tomas speaks to the crowd.
Tetsugen Bernard Glassman, American Zen Buddhist roshi
and co-founder of the Zen Peacemakers
Sunday, April 14, 2013
The Festival of the Bear
Built on the banks of the river Tech, surrounded by
mountains, Prats de Mollo was one of the most important border towns on the
French-Spanish border, and today still boasts much evidence of its rich past;
architectural and traditional.
One such tradition is the Fete de l'ours, or the Festival
of the Bear. The events, according to the legend, took place near the Col d’Ares, about 13 km from Prats de Mollo, at the foot
of mont
Falgas, Long ago, a young shepherdess fainted from shock when she stumbled upon
a bear whilst tending her flock. The bear, actually the devil in disguise, took
advantage of her swoon and spirited her away to the caves intending to seduce
her and steal her virginity. The young damsel however, prayed to Notre Dame du
Coral, nearby chapel overlooking the valley, to preserve her virtue, and the
bear was unable to approach her.
Nowadays, sheep skins are worn by the ’bears’ and their
faces and hands are blackened with a mixture of suie (soot) and huile (oil).
The bears are also provided with a very solid stick.
The hunters are provided with shot guns filled with
blanks and a gourd of ’good wine’.
Whether the 'hunters' wear Berruetas, I don't know, but
there are many berets to be seen during the festival.
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Smurfs and Berets
The Smurfs (French: Les Schtroumpfs) is a Belgian comic
and television franchise centered on a group of small blue fictional creatures
called Smurfs, created and first introduced as a series of comic characters by
the Belgian comics artist Peyo (pen name of Pierre Culliford) in 1958. There
are more than one hundred Smurfs, whose names are based on adjectives that
emphasize their characteristics, e.g. 'Jokey Smurf', 'Clumsy Smurf', and
'Smurfette' -- the first female Smurf to be introduced in the series.
In 1998, writer Marc Schmidt wrote a parody article
citing the Smurfs as an example of the impact of socialism in continental European
culture. French sociologist Antoine Buéno described them in a 2011 book as a
totalitarian and racist utopia. Studio Peyo head Thierry Culliford, the son of
Peyo, dismissed Buéno's accusations as "grotesque and frivolous." In
2011 Marc Schmidt's essay was scrutinized in a response essay by Kate Krake who
examined the nature of cultural theory built on textual observation and warned
against creating false allegories out of texts like The Smurfs.
Still, the red-capped Papa Smurf does have a strong
resemblance to Karl Marx, the mean wizard Gargamel looks identical to the
portrayal of 'the Wandering Jew' by the Nazi's and, the aggressive mean Smurfs
are obviously black...
Despite the Smurfs liking for a barettina like hat, I did
find a few pictures of berets on the little blue beasts too.