Tag Archives: Greece

The Semi-Naked Truth of John Palatinus: People from the Village

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I have always been fascinated with the distinction between artistic, erotic, and pornographic. The fine lines between the forms (if there are any lines at all) are tested by a lot of artists, some times to provoke, other times to test, and in some instances, well, just because it happened.

I remember the first time I saw a picture of a naked man. I was in that stage between not too young and not old enough, and its source was so unexpected that I remember surprise overtaking every other single feeling.
It was in a magazine. I remember going to the newsstand, and seeing the corner of a cover hidden behind a pile of other magazines on the top shelf. Now, you have to believe me, I really did not know why these magazines were on the top shelf, why they were covered in plastic, or why parts of them had small stickers blocking parts of the cover picture. I just read ‘great competition’ on the cover, and as I was going through the stage of collecting everything, I grabbed it, went to the counter, and even though I thought it was strange that the cashier asked me twice if I knew what I was buying, I accepted his offer for a black bag and went home.

I remember going in the living room, taking the magazine out of the bag and out of its plastic case, and opening it. The feature it was in started with a guy wearing a flannel shirt, black trousers and boots. His hair was curly and his face long. It seemed like every shot magically took one piece of clothing off him, so, when I turned the page, there he was, naked. I had never seen a picture of a naked man before. It was so strange. He was so …different. His penis was the strangest, weirdest thing I had seen up until that moment; don’t get me wrong, growing up in Greece meant getting your fair share of nude sculptures in museums, naked lithographs in history books and if participating in sports, locker rooms with other naked men. But the fact that this was on a magazine made this experience totally different. It was not meant to be artistic; it was intended to be erotic-even though it ended being pornographic.

So being in Space Station 65 and standing in front of John Palatinus‘s naked portraits of men is making me think of these distinctions. Male sexual photography was defined, stigmatised, and redefined during the 1950s, and Palatinus was one of the key figures in this era.
During that period, photographers started taking portraits of handsome men with built bodies, that as time passed they started losing items of clothing. The images were printed in magazines like Tomorrow’s Man, or mailed directly to customers in the pretence of admiring the male physique. However, when full-frontal pictures started emerging, the authorities stepped in and arrested various publishers, photographers, and models.

One of these photographers was John Palatinus. When the New York police department and the US Postage Inspectors raided his apartment, they confiscated all of his prints, photographs, original negatives, cameras, lights, and equipments. After a conviction of Conspiracy and a misdemeanour charge, Palatinus was disgraced, out of business, and most importantly robbed out of his whole back work.

Now, you might be reading this and thinking ‘well, what work? This was pornography!’. And that is where the fine line lies. Even though the pictures were sexually charged, they would be described as erotic instead of pornographic. They were admiring the male form instead of cheapening it. Palatinus got rid of the cheesy props and the cheap backdrops, and used white backgrounds, lights and shadow to highlight the topography of the male physique.

Countless of shoots have been informed from Palatinus’s work, and some have actually completely copied his style (giving him credit, of course). This is why archivist and curator of vintage physique photography, Alan Harmon, was extremely surprised when he after speaking with Palatinus, he discovered they not only lived close by, but would embark on a mission to retrieve a lot of his photography from various sources.

A large portion of his work has been recovered, and can be seen on the walls of Space Station 65. From the risqué to the explicit, it is the demure that seem to hide questions about sexuality, arousal, erotica and, well, art.

This made me think of the homoerotically charged imagery of Ambercrombie & Fitch, and the Men’s Health magazines that use simular poses and eventually claim to serve the same purpose: admire the male physique. The classic cover shot with a man looking down at his toned torso with a smile on his face is tinted with a hint of eroticism that can be found in that early male physique photography.

The camera might be digital now, but the light still captures the same questions, the same social mysteries, the same fine lines that make the edges of the pixels.

‘click’

Love,

G

Being Greek

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My skin is now tanned. My eyes carry a sadness around the corners, and I have the distinct feeling that I have trapped a breath in my chest, that I can’t seem to be able to breath out.
Last week, i had to visit my home country, as I needed to attend two funerals. I am Greek. I grew up in the hot, buzzing streets of Athens. People around me walked slow, talked fast, argued loudly and laughed louder. They gathered in the squares, with tea lights roped on the trees over them, the pavement cooling down under the night sky, children talking to each other, adults talking about each other, traditional music in the background for the older ones and foreign music in the foreground for the younger ones. Later we would go to the open-air cinema, eating a cheese-pie and coca cola from the can, reading the subtitles under the well groomed Hollywood faces.
I felt the sun kissing my face in the long summers, I run in the olive fields and dived in the crystal blue seas. I had this constant smell of sunscreen, and my skin was always salty, my hair always wet and my bathing suit always on. I would pick figs from the neighbour’s tree, and eat them under its shade. I smelt feta cheese roasting in the oven, fresh bread on the bakery windows, cheese and spinach pies resting on the kitchen counter.
Before mobile phones made me instantly available, my parents knew they could always find me in the city centre. I spent hours in Eleftheroudakis bookshop, walking down the isles, touching the spine of every book, eyes widening at the sight of unusual images, interesting titles, exotic covers. I would then make my way down to Metropolis, a CD and later DVD shop, and make countless wish-lists. I would walk down Monastiraki, Sintagma, Ermou, stopping in front of the shop windows, looking at the things in the shop, the people in the shop, the exchange of money for objects of desired happiness.
I don’t want to give an idea of false perfection. All of the above always happened behind a smoke screen, kindly provided by the 20pack of cigarettes of the person next to you. Compulsive smoking, innate judgement, and an unjustifiably rigid sense of morality. Anything that deviated from the norm has to be hidden; if not hidden, punished; and if not punished, at least humiliated. Men can (and often are encouraged to) cheat, personally and professionally, as long as they are white heterosexuals with an embedded sense of entitlement. Homosexuality is ridiculed and hidden, represented as a thinly tolerated anomaly that should be buried away from public view, varying from a moustache to a full blown wife and children.
The military is mandatory, meaning that you have to give a year of your life to stay in a camp in the far end corner of the country – unless your family has political connection, and can secure you an office position three blocks away from your semi-detached house. Indeed, family connections are everything: it is the only way to get a job, progress in it, make any kind of money and then hide it from the tax office. Tax evasion is a skin cell of the Greek epidermis; why do something right, when you can do it quick? What is the greater good if it’s not good for you?
The younger generation is sitting in the squares, having coffee and complaining about life. A small percentage will stay on the complains, and will not move into action. If you can stay at your parents home, file a few papers in their work place and have enough pocket money to pay you club entry, then why skip the sports pages for the Job classifieds? However, a big percentage is looking for jobs in their chosen field, with degrees from Greek and foreign Universities gathering dust in their bedroom drawers as they are knocking on doors that are locked and bolted. without a strong connection, a diploma is just worth as much as the paper that it is printed on. And then, if your parents can not really support you, what?
There is a small tinge of racism, especially towards Albanians, Pakistanis and Nigerians, economic refugees that are accused for stealing jobs from the Greeks; jobs that a lot of Greeks would consider beneath them, or too badly paid. Even so, extreme left parties have gained momentum, with a range of accusations against them.
All of these viewpoints are not shared by every Greek; but unfortunately, the overwhelming majority would nod acceptingly with most of the above, if not all. I don’t. I loved growing up in Greece, but once I did, I was unsure about how I felt in it. I did not really fit in all of the times, in most ways. Even though I was a piece of the puzzle, my edges seemed slightly different. I did not fit the profile, the macho tough bike-loving, sports-playing, cigarette in one hand and coffee on the other kind of person. And on top of that, I was not ashamed of who I was, of how different I was. I always smiled when people told me I needed to fit in; why be happy, when you can be normal?
And all that said, I still feel Greece as a beloved part of me. My home is London now, and I moved away physically and emotionally as well. My feelings for Greece is a bittersweet traditional desert, served in a crowded square, under tea lights and smoking bystanders.
So, every time that I tell someone I am Greek, I am telling him all of this in a simple statement of origin. I am telling him of my pride and my shame, of my good and bad memories, of the ups and lows. In the past couple of years, every time I tell a person I am Greek, I get a canned response that is bound to include the word crisis in it, when all i do is just state my origin.
Greece and Greeks are not just the poster boys of a country in a dire economic state. It is a nation that live its good as intensely as its bad, its happiness as tragically as its sadness, smiling at the face of danger, raising a glass to what was instead of what will be. Most of the places I described in my good memories are now closed, bankrupt and covered in angry graffitis. Most of the negative attitudes I mentioned are changing, sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worst. I walked in the city centre, and it was empty. The stores closed. Someone wrote on the window of a vacant store: a city that is burning; a flower that is blooming.
My tan will fade away, but I am not sure if my sadness for my country will. All I can do is hope, for change, for light, for the younger generation to have something more that a tanned skin to remember their country by.

Love,

G

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Name Day

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When I get up in the morning, I usually turn the TV on, fill the kettle up, and look out of the kitchen window. Invariably, One Tree Hill will be on, and I will allow myself to be sucked in the watery eyes of the characters, with the relief of living someone else’s drama instead of your own. In yesterday’s episode, one of the main characters forgot their own birthday, and everyone around them seemed to have forgotten too. I was sipping on my hot water with lemon, wondering how one could forget such an important day, asking myself how could screenwriters get paid to get away with such far-fetched daily facts.
Today I woke up from a call on my phone, turning around, letting it go to voicemail. Then I received a text. Then another. I opened my eyes, with a frown forming between my brows, wondering what happened so early in the morning. I stood up, walked to the dresser where I charge my phone and looked at the screen. ‘Happy Name Dayyyyy!!‘ it flashed for a second, and then went black. I had forgotten my own name day.
Now, let me explain what a name day is. In Greece, most names correspond to a Saint’s name. In the months, certain Saints have days of celebration, and if a town or village has this Saint as a patron, then there is a big celebration there; accordingly, if you are named after this Saint, it is your celebration as well. You have to treat people with sweets, and in return they give you cards, gifts, and even throw you a party. It’s like a second birthday. And I forgot mine.
For some reason I felt a bit dizzy. I put the phone down, backtracked, and went back to bed. I looked at the ceiling for a couple of minutes, then got up, turned the TV on, filled the kettle and looked out of the kitchen window. In today’s episode, a character found out she got pregnant. I wondered if I needed to pop by Tesco, and get a Clear Blue pregnancy test. Obviously, things are never too far fetched.
My phone rang twice that hour. I first spoke to my dad. He gave me his and my family’s wishes, chatted about everyday things, plans for meeting up, arranging to come by. I have not seen him for about a year, not since I last went to Greece. There was something very soothing and very sad in his voice. I found myself clutching my chest when we spoke, and I realised how much I miss him. I then talked to my mum; she gave me her wishes, made our classic jokes, asked me if I am eating well, if my brother called yet, and if I am happy. She then asked me if I remembered the times that we would make a desert for my name day. And I did. And it brought memories of our old house, and the archaic mixer, and the two teaspoons of brandy that magically turned into half the bottle, and the giggling and the smells, and the floor tiles, and the plastic plates, and the smiles, and the morning after where I would sneak to the fridge and grab a fork and eat the rest of it before she got up, when she was actually sitting in her room waiting for me to finish. And all the memories pushed the back of my eyes with tears, and I had to come to the here and now, and control my voice, and not show how much I missed her.
When we hang up, I sat on the sofa. My tea was lukewarm, and I tried to understand why it bothered me so much that I forgot. The past few weeks have been very hectic; they are very close to a merry-go-round, where you spin and spin and spin and spin, but essentially you remain in the same place, just with weak feet and blurry vision. April seemed to be a month of decisions, leaps of faith, amends, and new beginnings.
I guess the reason it bothered me so much was my fear that I am letting go of important parts of my identity; of forgetting my roots. I always had my Greek friends reminding me of any upcoming name days, birthdays, celebrations. I would see it in the news, read it in the papers, hear it in the street. I am now living in London for the last 5 years, and it has played such a big part in shaping me into the person I am. I feel at home, in ways I never did, and never could, in Athens. I consider London my home now, and I am making a life and a living here. But I would not like to lose the parts of the Greek identity I have come to love. And I think that forgetting my name day made me fear that this is happening. I worried that I allowed all the April drama to suck me in so much that I became a character in my own One Tree Hill. I realised how important it was to realise it. I understood how important it was to act on it.
I got up, wore my running shoes and rushed outside. It was pouring with rain, and minutes later I was sprinting down the street. My chest was tightening, and I found myself pushing harder, running faster, my shins stinging, the rain kissing my face, my hands moving faster, until my whole body got so tense that it had no option but to relax. An hour later, I was in the shower, the hot water washing away all the stiffness that was there 60 minutes earlier.
I got out in time to answer my phone, and it was my partner with plans for the evening. My email inbox notified me of all the well-wishers on Facebook. I looked outside. Even if I did not remember, others did.
I had some more tea, and indulged in some of my favourite chocolate. I looked out of the window, at the rain, at the people. I am now at Costa, having a lemon and poppyseed muffin, and a Roasted Hazelnut Latte. I am looking out of the window, at the rain, at the people.
Happy name day to me.

Love,

G

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