Wishing all Boineros & Boineras all the very best for the New Year!
Saturday, December 31, 2022
Happy New Year, Boineros and Boineras!
Friday, December 30, 2022
Sebastian Tauerbach
The image of a bearded and a mustachioed man in a beret wearing a hat with ear flaps are two of 30 preserved wooden heads adorning the ceiling of the Envoys’ Room of the Polish Wawel Royal Castle. The current arrangement of this ceiling is a creation from the beginning of the 20th century.
The only source of information about its original appearance is the contract concluded with Master Sebastian Tauerbach in 1535. The contract mentions 194 carved heads and 194 rosettes, which the master was commissioned to fashion. There are no clues as to how they were to be arranged. The first ceiling burned down in 1540. It is not known whether the preserved heads were made before the fire – thus belonging to the original decoration – but there was no time to mount them, or whether they were carved after the fire and intended for rebuilding the Envoys’ Room.
The heads preserved to this day are only a small percentage of the original ceiling decoration.
Thursday, December 29, 2022
Fidel Castro hits the Ball
The Great Revolutionary*/Dictator* was a keen baseball player and supporter of the game in Cuba.
Nice to see he kept his boina on while playing though...
Wednesday, December 28, 2022
Prisoner 155
One of the best graphic novels I have read (yes, highly recommended!).
Prisoner 155: Simón Radowitzky is a beautifully illustrated graphic novel that tells the story of Simón Radowitzky (1891-1956), a gentle soul caught up in a cruel world.
Author/illustrator Agustín Comotto is an Argentinian living in Spain where the book was first published in 2016.
Radowitzky appears in a few books (recently The Anarchist Expropriators and Rebellion in Patagonia--both from AK Press), but this is the first English-language book devoted solely to him.
His tumultuous life begins with his immigration from Ukraine to Argentina, followed by his assassination of Colonel Falcón (who presided over the slaughter of 100 workers) in 1909.
Banished to a penal colony, he escaped, was recaptured and tortured, serving a total of twenty years.
Upon release he joined the Spanish Revolution, after which he decamped for Mexico, where he died in 1956 while employed at a toy factory.
Tuesday, December 27, 2022
Cuban Baseball Berets
Cuba considers baseball its national sport. Since
approximately 1865 or 1866 this sport has been practiced and has become part of
the lives of most Cubans. On December 27th,1874, the first baseball game in
Cuba took place in a field known as Palmar de Junco, in the province of
Matanzas.
Havana's Marianao team, late 1940s or early 1950s |
Winter League's Almendares team, 1947 |
Despite its American origin, baseball is strongly associated
with Cuban nationalism, as it effectively replaced colonial Spanish sports such
as bullfighting.
Habana Baseball Club beret, made of silk-screened felt, circa 1940 |