Tag: street

  • Women on Matasari Street, reloaded

    Women on Matasari Street, reloaded

    A cat drawn on a T-shirt, dutifully scratching
    a vinyl record, under the motto When the Cat is at home!. Another T-shirt displayed
    a motivational slogan Bee the sun! And, just as expected, there’s another such
    slogan, Dream Big! painted on a shirt: craft ice-cream, colored cotton candy,
    Indian, Asian dishes, burgers, home-prepared beverages or cocktails, but also
    Prosecco, have made, as usual, the regular stuff in the last weekend of May on
    Matasari Street. A street that, for 11 years now, has been giving the go-ahead
    for the summer events happening in Bucharest. It changed its meaning and
    purpose of three decades ago, when it was a drug-trafficking area where street
    workers were soliciting. That is why the phrase Women on Matasari Street
    changed its meaning thanks to a genuine urban festival, invented a decade ago. From
    the very early editions of the event that made it possible for a complete makeover
    to occur in the area, in people’s courtyards on Matasari Street painting workshops
    were staged, but also tailoring or handmade jewelry workshops.
    Areas for antiquaries and conferences have been created as well.


    Merry people are jostling about on Matasari Street, braving the
    flippant May weather, with quick spells of rain or brief periods of sunshine,
    with winds blowing and older or newer participants providing local color to the
    place. For starters, we spoke to the vice-president of Kola Kariola, an association
    that brokers the adoption of puppies, Marius Chirca. With datils on that, here
    is Marius Chirca.


    We’ve been absent from the
    events for a couple of years now. The pandemic
    prevented us from participating. We mainly came…well…not to raise funds, we
    turned up to socialize with the people who support us in the online environment,
    since we have over 400,000 followers and for each such event, we participate in
    a bid to meet those living close by, in Bucharest, in Ilfov, some even came from
    outside Bucharest to see us, to have a conversation about certain cases. As on Facebook, on Instagram, where we promote our activity, we cannot
    just post absolutely everything. We come with promotional articles, we also
    have puppies for adoption. We work, we don’t have weekends, we don’t have our days
    off, as there is no such thing as closing time when it comes to animals and for
    us that comes as an opportunity, going out, being outdoors, having a bit of
    fun, we laugh, we crack a joke on and off, ’cause otherwise, there is more like
    sadness and pain in what we do. That is what we get to see! We have already had
    contact data from people who want to adopt, tomorrow we bring other puppies to
    promote them, and if we spend at least two days here, if there is one single
    dog we send home, that means we haven’t been here for nothing.


    At the Festival, Ilinca Andrei can be found behind a stand with
    bracelets inscribed with Morse code messages.
    Here is her story.


    We’ve got a brand making bracelets, each bracelet
    has a word written in the Morse code, and on the little card that goes with the
    bracelet we have the word, in the language we use, but also its transcription
    in the Morse code, with lines and dots. The idea sprang from the wish to have a
    bracelet with a personalized message that cannot be accessible to everybody but
    which can only be known by the person wearing that bracelet. We have explored several possibilities,
    and the Morse code seemed the most ingenious way to code a message, especially
    on a bracelet. Clients seem to be most interested in messages from the family
    area, like mother, father, brother, sister, but there are also words in English
    that our clients chose, such as love,
    hug, hope, faith, so we sold those very well.


    Women and men on stilts were making their
    way with difficulty on the crowded street, the children tried a more unusual
    pastime, that of entering a circle and staying closed for a few
    seconds in a balloon of soap. Also for children, we discovered a candle making
    workshop. There we talked with Andreea
    Şerpe, who had a very special stand, full of cake-looking candles, of shapes and
    colors that made one think they were in a confectionary.




    I make candles from soy
    wax, in the shape of sweets. We have all kinds of stand-alone candles, candles
    in a jar, wax melts for aromatherapy lamps, we use perfumes and ingredients as
    natural as possible. We also organize workshops for children, we have pots that
    they can decorate with flowers, with all kinds of fruit, pieces of chocolate,
    candies (made of wax), we use cold wax,
    so that it doesn’t burn and everything is safe. I had two or three children who
    actually bit into the Macarons and they were very upset, they started crying,
    even though I’d told them they were not edible; they couldn’t understand that,
    but they were very cute!




    Cezar Proca participated in the Festival
    with natural products for external and internal use, but also with decorations
    inspired by nature




    We came to Women on
    Matasari primarily with skin-care products, all organic, therapeutic, based on
    oils obtained by cold pressing the seeds and organic medicinal plants. We get
    the oil drop by drop, it is a medicinal product for the skin. We also have
    plant terrariums, wooden decorations with plant terrariums, wood and ceramic
    decorations and hand-painted ceramics. The Digestive and the Bitter are drinks
    obtained from herbs macerated in fruit brandy from Satu Mare, the teas are made
    of pressed herbs, we can get two liters of tea from one medallion. The digestive drink helps to calm the nervous
    system thanks to the mint and lemon balm it contains. It’s very good for digestion, after a rich
    meal, especially in the evening, it also disinfects the oral cavity and we
    sleep better. And the Bitter is the
    recipe of Dr. Engineer Iuliana Barbu from Farmacia Naturii, a recipe tested for
    more than 20 years.


    At 6:00 p.m., the street became more animated,
    as every year, with live music, and the spectators enjoyed the experience to
    the fullest, despite the rain that this year chose to appear from time to time
    at Women on Matasari.







  • Street Art at the White Night of Art Galleries

    Street Art at the White Night of Art Galleries

    The 13th edition of the White Night of Art Galleries has been held recently in several cities in Romania. Art galleries, museums, cultural institutes, alternative venues, creative hubs and artist workshops offered night-long contemporary art programmes in Bucharest and 13 other Romanian cities. Alba Iulia, Arad, Brasov, Cluj-Napoca, Craiova, Iasi, Miercurea Ciuc, Petrila, Resita, Sfantu Gheorghe, Sibiu, Targu Mures and Timisoara were the hosts of special events as part of this festival.



    The White Night of Art Galleries gives the public an opportunity to discover contemporary art in all its diversity, from visual arts to performing arts, music and film, and in all its forms of presentation, from museum display to curatorial concepts or works displayed in artists studios.



    This year was the first time when the White Night of Art Galleries resulted in a permanent work of art: a project called Outside Histories, hosted by the Rezidenta BRD Scena 9 cultural venue in Bucharest. For this project, the artists Alexandru Ciubotariu, aka Pisica Patrata (the Romanian for “the Square Cat), Robert Obert, Maria Balan and John Dot S painted live the walls of the venue. Bizarre scenes inspired from the Aztec culture, blended with Byzantine-inspired decorations, surround the yard of this building, which is an item of architectural heritage.



    The building dates back to 1890, it belonged to King Michael, and was originally a gift from King Ferdinand to his wife, Queen Marie of Romania. The royal estate was later on turned into the headquarters of a public institution, then it hosted a Mexican restaurant, to be turned recently into a contemporary cultural centre, and it carries the marks of all the purposes it served during its long history.



    Alexandru Ciubotariu, aka Pisica Patrata, is one of the most highly appreciated illustrators and street artists in Romania, and the founder of a Museum of Comic Books. We talked to him while he was painting live, on the night of the exhibition opening, and he told us what he was working on:



    Pisica Patrata: “I am working on a tridimensional piece, which is somewhat new in my area of interest. What I am trying to convey is roughly unchanged, the only difference is that I am now trying to transfer these things into a tridimensional area. But for the time being its just work in progress.



    One of the projects is called “Un-hidden, and Pisica Patrata told us a few words about it as well:


    Pisica Patrata: “There are actually 2 exhibitions combined. One of them is a personal exhibition, I called it ‘+Plus, but apart from the mural paintings in the city, which more people seem to be familiar with, I am also trying to include the preliminary drafts, the details drawn on canvas, a tridimensional area, and even a few comic strips, so as to give viewers a broader image of my interests.



    Street artists were the stars of this years edition of the White Night of Art Galleries, Pisica Patrata told us:



    Pisica Patrata: “This is a support exhibition for a project intended to map all things street-art in Bucharest at first, and across the country later on. It is basically an interactive map, which can be accessed by anybody, and where people can find every work of street art in Romania. The map is updated almost the same moment when an artist finishes a piece of work, so essentially the items in the exhibition are the reflection of the works you can find in public areas in the country.



    Pisica Patrata also told us about the extent to which street art has caught on in Romania:



    Pisica Patrata: “I think in the recent period quite major works in this field have been completed, and the general impression is that people are beginning to understand the differences between graffiti, street art and street installations. And this makes street art easier to understand and to accept. I believe we can safely say now that lately street art has become more palatable.



    And because the Pisica Patrata exhibition was hosted by Imbold Gallery, which specializes in the reconstruction of the communist era, we invited the artist to explain this association:



    Pisica Patrata: “It was their suggestion to begin with. I had worked with them extensively, and they insisted that we should put up this exhibition. I agreed, but on condition that I did what I try to do in every exhibition, namely to create a new artwork in each area or venue where I work. This is how this tridimensional item that you found me working on came to be. We still have a few walls left to paint, weather permitting, and several comic strips, four of which are scheduled for release almost simultaneously. The publishers are Casa Radio, where Ive also been coordinating a collection devoted to children, called Radio Prichindel, which I am very fond of. So probably at the Gaudeamus book fair in November we will have 4 new volumes.



    As the artist told us, “comic books are my first love, so Ill continue to put pen to paper and draw all the characters that live in my imagination.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • After street clashes, political squabble

    After street clashes, political squabble

    A harmful influence, which fuels conflicts and persistently and deliberately induces discord in the Romanian society, disregarding and overstepping his constitutional powers. This is how the Social Democratic Party depicts the President Klaus Iohannis, in a harsh message that further strains the already tense relationship between the ruling party and the head of state.



    The Social Democrats accuse the President, whom they dub “the Divider, of daring to encourage the anarchic, anti-governmental and anti-Power street protests. There is no doubt, they go on, although without producing evidence for their claims, that Iohannis political supporters were involved in organising the protests, encouraged harsh and obscene rhetoric and attitudes, and some of them even predicted and plotted the street violence.



    The Social Democrats believe that the Presidents request for an investigation into the riot police response on Friday is aimed at humiliating and scaring the gendarmes into submission, weakening the determination of institutions that are vital to protecting public order.



    In response, Klaus Iohannis addressed the citizens, reiterating the opinion he had expressed shortly after Fridays street clashes, namely that the gendarmes intervention was blatantly disproportionate compared to the conduct of the vast majority of the protesters. Civic participation was severely punished with tear gas, water cannons and excessive brutality, Klaus Iohannis argued. Violence and the brutal repression of protesters are unacceptable under any circumstances, and attacking innocent people, journalists, women and children is unimaginable in an EU member state, the President said. The Social Democrats chaotic and irrational governing, with controversial and anti-constitutional regulations and with attacks against magistrates, is now followed by repressive conduct, Iohannis says:



    Klaus Iohannis: “Those who seek to crush the judiciary and the fight against corruption wanted a diversion, to build unnecessary and false tension within society. What will happen next, if this government continues to treat its own citizens like this, if it continues to resort to violent repression against those who do not want Romania thrown back into the past?



    Tens of participants in Fridays protests filed criminal complaints against riot police, and prosecutors extended their investigations for misdeeds ranging from abuse of office to misconduct. They also investigate whether the gendarmes left behind two of their colleagues, who were unprotected and were beaten by hooligans.



    Fortunately, the street violence, reminding people of the struggles to reconstruct Romanian democracy in the first years after the fall of communism, did not occur the following days. But the political disputes that it has triggered are only beginning.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • December 26, 2017 UPDATE

    December 26, 2017 UPDATE

    CHRISTMAS – In Romania, Orthodox and Greek-Catholic Christians celebrated, on the second day of Christmas, the Synaxis of the Theotokos, which is a celebration of Mary, the Mother of God. This is one of the oldest feast days devoted to Virgin Mary, dating back to the 5th Century. The Synaxis of the Theotokos is the assembly of believers to honour the one through whom the incarnation of God was possible. Also on Tuesday, Roman Catholic Christians celebrate St Stephen, the first martyr.




    HOLIDAYS – Thousands of Romanians are spending their winter holidays in the mountain resorts in Valea Prahovei region in the south, in Maramures in the north-west of the country and in Bucovina, in the north-east. Sinaia and Buşteni, on Prahova Valley, are among the most popular resorts in the country at this time of the year. In Bâlea Lac, in Făgăraş Mountains, at over 2,000 m altitude, the new Ice Hotel, the only one of its kind in Romania, was opened on Sunday. Most of the tourists having booked a room here come from abroad.




    ROYAL HOUSE – The Royal House of Romania attended on Tuesday the Christmas service held at the Orthodox church in Săvârşin, the west of Romania. The royals are on 40-day mourning after the death of Romanias last king, Michael I. He passed away on December 5, aged 96, and was buried on December 16, in Curtea de Arges, southern Romania, where the other 3 monarchs of Romania are also interred. Tens of thousands of people took part in the national funerals of the one they regard as a model of dignity, honour, devotion and love for the country.




    CONSULTATIONS – The PM of Romania, Mihai Tudose, has agreed to hold talks on Wednesday with representatives of over 40 NGOs involved in the street protests against the controversial changes in the justice laws. The organisations had sent the PM an open letter expressing their willingness to contribute to dialogue, consultation and solutions, in full compliance with the rule of law, democratic principles and fundamental human rights. They say there have been major deficiencies in the dialogue and consultations between lawmakers and society with respect to the justice laws and the changes of the criminal codes. On Friday, the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, Thorbjorn Jagland, sent a letter to President Klaus Iohannis, urging him to request an official opinion from the Venice Commission with respect to the legislative reform endorsed by Parliament. Previously, the embassies of Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Netherlands and Sweden to Bucharest issued a joint letter calling on all stakeholders in the judiciary reform process to avoid measures that would weaken the independence of the judiciary and the fight against corruption. In response, the Foreign Ministry said strengthening the rule of law and fighting corruption are among the priorities of the Government of Romania. In turn, the leaders of the ruling coalition made up of the Social Democratic Party and the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats in Romania, Liviu Dragnea and Calin Popescu Tariceanu, respectively, promised that the Justice Minister Tudorel Toader, and Foreign Minister Teodor Melescanu would inform embassies properly with respect to the legislative changes in this field.




    EU – The German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said that if the EU managed to get a smart deal with Britain that governs relations with Europe after Brexit, it could be a model for other countries. The German diplomat added that Tukey and Ukraine are not likely to get full EU membership very soon, which is why the EU should consider alternative forms of closer cooperation. Gabriel also suggested that such an approach could take the form of a closer customs union with Turkey. Although the current situation proves that that country is still rather far from joining the EU, recent moves by Ankara indicate willingness to improve relations with Brussels, the German official also said. Shortly before Christmas, Turkey decided to free a German pilgrim after nearly 9 months of detention, and a German journalist who had spent 7 months in custody over alleged ties with a terrorist organisation.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)