and then some
October 19th, 2009

Connemara returned

Connemara from Michelle McCarron on Vimeo.

18 years past and I find myself here once again. Connemara is a place of legends and wild rugged landscape. It is an environment of delicate peat bogs, lakes, stone walls, craggy peaks, sheep, and a sense of peace. There are few places more uniquely Irish than Connemara. In a country that has gone through (and continues to do so) profound social and economic upheavel one can still come here and get a sense of something above the rush of the cities and modern life. Connemara is not just a place it is a feeling. Situated in west County Galway the people there make a clear distinction between this place, themselves and the rest of Galway if not the rest of Ireland. You couldn’t fault them for doing so. It is wild, peaceful, magic and mysterious. But it can also be loud with the sound of wind blowing across it mountain tops, it’s people laughing and traditional music escaping from bars and halls. It is home to Connemara National Park and the Twelve Ben peaks in the Maumturk mountain range where you can hike for days with sheep watching your every move. The Glencoaghan Horseshoe is one of the best hikes I’ve done anywhere and is an Irish classic. Not to mention the Diamond Hill hike which is a great way to get your day started.

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It has forever been a hub for artists and writers for it’s easy to be inspired here. The main town of the area is Clifden and if you’re lucky enough to be in Connemara this week of October you’ll catch Clifden Arts Week where Irish Poet Laureate and Nobel Prize winner Seamus Heaney will be in attendance. Whilst in Clifden I had the pleasure and good ‘craic’ of strolling into the Lavelle Art Gallery where I met owner and himself a talented artist Gavin Lavelle. Gavin is a graduate of the National College of Art and Design in Dublin. We mused over the state of the art world in Ireland and I left laughing with promises to return to continue the conversation.  If you’re one for acommodations that strike at the heart of you and ooze with character I’d highly recommend the Old Monastery Hostel in Letterfrack.  Situated 35 paces from the National Park entrance. If you need to write a book, make decisions, or just be in a hospitable relaxed atmosphere you’d stay here.

This is a special place and a unique one. You won’t find the likes of it anywhere else. And that’s fact. The people who live there know it and when they say goodbye they do so with a cheeky smile because they know chances are you’ll be back. They wave with one hand and with the other they have a tight hold that lasts forever.

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A little techy moment now for all of you geeks. The video is shot with the new 5d Mark II and edited in Final Cut. The mark II presents it’s own challenges when it comes to editing it’s files and getting them into a format where I could edit natively in Final Cut but after much digging round the internet I worked a few things out.

October 1st, 2009

Berlin Reborn

On the morning of August 13th 1961 Berliners woke up to find their city divided by a wall that stretched for 29 miles. During it’s existence 5000 people tried to escape from the East and it’s estimated 239 died in doing so. Nov 9th this year will mark 20 years since the fall of the infamous Berlin wall. In early Sept I had an opportunity to visit Germany’s capital. A new Berlin part of a new and reunified Germany.

My memories of the period in 1989 when the wall came down are mostly those images that flashed across a television screen as part of enthralling news reporting from ITN. At 16 years of age a kid growing up in Ireland, the full meaning of the fall of communism across Europe did not register, yet I was fully aware of the historical significance of what was happening before my eyes. As so often is for a young adult the significance of events can very much be read by the reactions of the grown ups around you. Some being those sitting with me watching, the others being those on the  TV screen. Images of men and women smashing the wall with sledgehammers, hugging each other while tears rolled down their faces. Throngs of people pushing across a border in disbelief and fear of a clampdown that might once again thwart their efforts to escape from an oppressive regime.

My fascination with Berlin stems from these childhood memories as well as a desire to check out a city that is fast becoming (if it’s not already) the cultural and art capital of Europe. In recent years it has become a sought after destination for contemporary artists and it was time for me to go check out the rumors.

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The Brandenburg Gate, once a simple of division, now a symbol of a reunified nation.

Today parts of the wall still stand dotted across the city as relics to the past and for all those who come to see a part of history. Many of these pieces still bear the images that people chose to paint across a drab grey concrete wall that drove a barrier across their hearts and the heart of their city.

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The remnants real value lie in that are they are testament to just what this city and it’s people have overcome. I couldn’t help thinking that this is exactly what makes Berlin so vibrant. Here is a city that has been given a chance at a new lease of life and Berliners it seems are determined that they are going to make the most of it. It has always been a city where artists, scholars, academics have flocked so it’s cultural significance is not something new. The only difference now perhaps being that the city has a sense of really coming into it’s own after being completely devastated by the 2nd World War and then later divided by communism. Across the city much is facade for what is coming and it is true that the cranes across the city are almost as numerous as the famous landmarks that the city lays claim to. It is somewhat bizarre as you stroll the city when you realize that a lot of it is fake. A one dimensional graphic representation of the future propped up by webs of scaffolding.

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Yet for all the facade the architecture of Berlin was what grabbed my attention most about the city. It is truly a beautiful European capital. The first thing I noticed was it’s ‘openesss’ as regards the city’s architectural planning. Nowhere in the city did I feel like I was being enveloped by giant skyscrapers that blotted out the sky and dwarfed me on the street. I felt like I could breath and immediately I felt at ease. I liked this city a lot. From it periods of Romanticism, to the New Objectivity of the 20’s, the totalitarian of it’s Nazi style, the Utilitarianism that marks the old division between east and west to the explosion of contemporary building, it is a jewel in the history of architecture. It’s contemporary architecture design projects are some of the most forward thinking I’ve seen anywhere.

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The Berlin Philharmonic Hall designed by architect Hans Scharoun completed in 1963.

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The GSW building by architects Sauerbruch Hutton nominated for a Sterling Prize and noted worldwide for it's low energy and ecological sustainable design.

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The old and the new working in harmony. The neo romanesque Kaiser William memorial church by Franz Schwecten was destroyed in WWII. The new church a hexagonal tower was designed by Egon Eiermann.

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Old east Berlin apartment building.

Urban planning has left streets wide and most buildings low for what I suspect is a consideration for the healthy psyche of the people who work and live here. Tree lined streets are prevalent as well as a bike lane system and user demographic that would make San Francisco where I live look like the Mickey Mouseville of bike commuting. I saw no aggression between drivers and bikers, a common site in SF. Perhaps that has to do with the fact that Germans really do know how to drive. Hipsters were barely visible. Apparently Berliners don’t need to prove their coolness. They just are. Women put style into bike riding instead of just low riding skinny jeans that made them look like construction workers bending over at a building site. Traffic congestion is low and traffic flow efficient. The U Bahn and the S Bahn provide commuters with an extensive underground system that covers the entire city.

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9 percent of Germans commute by bike. In a city of 3.4 million people, 500,000 people ride bikes everyday. The city spends 3million euros($4.3 million dollars) every year on 600 km of bike paths and lanes.

In my short time and my curiosity of the Berlin art scene I only managed 2 gallery visits.  One to The Berlin Gallery and the other  to the New National Gallery. Unfortunaltely for me both of these galleries had large sections closed in preparation for upcoming exhibitons in time for the approaching 20 year anniversary. Yet operating on half mast both of these institutions managed to leave their mark. Both galleries The Berlinsche Galerie and the Neue Nationalgalerie as they are know to locals are both meccas for contemporary, modernist art lovers, the former concentrating on home grown art the latter more international in it’s scope. The National Gallery building designed by architect Mies Van Der Rohe is beautiful in it’s starkness and linear form with an overhanging roof of steel who’s strength of form isn’t fully appreciated until you approach and stand beneath it. I simply loved it. It was one of those structures that reminded me of why I love modern architecture.

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The New National Gallery.

It is not an exaggeration to say that the BilderTraume exhibit of mostly surrealist works currently at the National Gallery was easily one of the best exhibits I’ve seen anywhere. From a private collection it included work from Dali, Miro, Pollack, Picasso, Ernst, Magritte, Rivera, Tanguy to name a few. If you’re in Berlin I’d recommend making a point of seeing it.

From what I’ve read about Berlin since I’ve left there is of course division within it’s citizens about the ‘progress’ and the building blitz that has occurred in recent years. Gentrification that goes along with it is utterly transforming neighborhoods and there are stories of the poorer less central neighborhoods being ignored as far as investment in their upkeep. The movement of people is occurring now in the reverse direction from west to east because they can’t afford the price of progress. In the strongest economy in Europe everything still comes with a price. It remains to be seen just how well Berlin and perhaps Germany as a whole can cope with it’s past as it hurtles into the future.

September 1st, 2009

the day I met….Dave Eggers

There I was holed up at the home office pushing pixels around. It was beautiful outside and I was going into my 7th hour of staring at the computer screen. It was time to get out. My mind numb from repetition, I needed fresh air and a few revolutions on the bike to blow the staleness away. I headed up 24th street towards the Noe Valley neighborhood. I’d just parked the bike at a usual spot of mine in front of the Cover to Cover bookstore. I turned around to check out their bargain books that always lie there on a table outside.

It was a small page. Letter size. It was the notice taped to the window that read ‘Dave Eggers, today 2-4pm. “Today” ? ‘I muttered to myself. Checked the time. It was 3pm. “Really”? I heard me ask myself. I poked my head in the door. There was a handful of people standing in front of a guy sitting at a desk. All in all we were probably outnumbered by the staff. But yes it was Eggers and it was quickly becoming one of those situations where you find yourself in a good place at the right time. I tidied my helmet hair head, brushed the beads of sweat off my brow and I joined the queue.

I read Eggers story ‘What is the What’ last year and it immediately struck me. It is a powerful story based around Valentino Achak Deng’s, flight from war torn Sudan into refugee camps in Ethiopia and finally resettlement in Atlanta. Valentino was one of thousands of children who escaped the brutal civil war that ravaged his country from 1983 to 2005. One of the thousands who became known as the ‘Lost boys of Sudan’. It is at the same time a brutal account of repression and the triumph of the human spirit in it’s battle to survive. Eggers was a Pulitzer finalist for his book a ‘Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius’ which I haven’t even gotten to yet. The fact that he lives in San Francsico now and opened his project 826 Valencia aimed at helping kids 6-18years develop their writing skills, a couple of doors down from me, compelled me to this man even more. For Dave Eggers is not just a writer. He’s a journalist, an activist, a participant in his community and a human being with his mind wide open to what goes on around him and not just in the bubble of San Francisco but the wider world. For that as well as his talent, I have admired him.

So my turn came and I walked up to where he was sitting at his wee desk. He was definitely a handsome, healthy, happy looking man. I got a good feeling about him instantly. We had a nice chat him and I. He like every good Irish American was eager to tell me of his Irish roots. ‘I’m 7/8ths Irish’ he said. Hence McSweeneys the name of his San Francisco publishing company.  ”Fair enough, that’ll do” I said, with a wry smile. He was off to Ireland in a few days to help acclaimed Irish author Roddy Doyle open the Dublin equivalent of 826. His pride in his Irish roots was demonstrated with a extravagant scribble across my copy of his new book proclaiming such.

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It reads : ‘To Michelle, Hail Ireland and all things Irish. Your true friend, Dave Eggers (nee McSweeney)”.

If his new book ‘Zeitoun’ a story of Abdulrahman and Kathy Zeitoun struggling in the tragedy of New Orelans that was Hurricane Katrina, is anything like ‘What is the What’ you’d have a good mind to go get yourself a copy of it.

Dave Eggers is a literary gem that we have here in this city and he can be my ‘true friend’ and neighbor any day.

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