Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Asleep in a Grotto
It has been about a year
since I wrote of our brief visit to ancient Matera while returning to Calitri
from Otranto on the coast of Puglia. At
that time I described how Maria Elena and I had stopped-off for a brief visit,
which turned into a lunch only to unfold into a surprise visit to the hotel
room once used by Mel Gibson during the filming of "The Passion of the Christ”. We had heard the story of Matera - not to be
confused with Maratea located farther to the west on the Tyrrhenian seacoast. We knew of the death-like existence of its
inhabitants in the 30’s and wanted to see for ourselves this grand rift in the
earth where man had lived for millennia.
After this brief exposure to Matera, we knew we had to someday return.
On
a recent stay in Calitri, about a month into our time there, we decided to
return to Matera but this time we'd stay overnight in the Sassi di Matera
(Stones of Matera) to experience it more fully.
A few minutes online was all it took to obtain a reservation at L’Hotel in Pietra (The Hotel in Stone). This boutique hotel, a converted 13th century
monastery itself gouged from the mountainside, is located near the rim of this natural
pit and adjacent to modern Matera situated on the plateau above. It was our hope that a stay there would give
us a feel for what it was like living
in a cave, albeit a deluxe one in this case.
It
was an easy two hour ride from Calitri in Campania to Matera in the adjacent
province of Basilicata. We skirted Mt.
Vultura, an extinct volcano visible from our balcony, by way of a modern road
that for the most part shadows the old Roman Appian Way southeast until it
joined with the highway to Potenza.
Nearing Potenza, we then broke off toward the east across the beautiful
countryside of the Basento river valley. Approaching Matera, as requested, I made a
call to the hotel to coordinate on parking our vehicle. Part of our reservation included the use of a
local parking garage. My call triggered Giovanni,
who would meet us at the garage. This
garage, located in modern Matera, was some distance away from the hotel. Giovanni would coordinate our parking with
the garage attendant and, in addition to being our guide to our accommodations,
help with our luggage. We found the
garage without any problem and shortly afterwards Giovanni arrived. We waited sometime as he disappeared into the
garage only to return to explain that he needed to return to the hotel for some
sort of pass. There’s coordination and
then there is coordination! More time
passed while we waited, enough time that I was tempted, at the urging of a
local resident, to park in an available spot on the street. I actually tried to fit into the space but
decided against it, preferring instead to wait for the security of the garage. All told it took some time to get our vehicle
settled in the garage before following Giovanni off to the hotel.
Through
town traffic then past a park we followed our leader who, knowing the code
of the labyrinth of streets that wiggled away in every direction, soon brought
us to L’Hotel in Pietra. Passing through a small courtyard we entered
a combined lobby, reception and breakfast area. This space had once been the nave of an early
church. Its large common area with soaring yellowy-beige ceilings
and lofty vertical looping arches was
bright, comfortable and utterly stunning.
The reception area was set off in a cavity, possibly where a side altar had
once stood. On the counter my eye caught
sight of an old radio, still operating, that transported me years into the past
to a style in time we now call art-deco.
Here time travel can happen and it had already begun.
Although
we had reserved a standard room, we were upgraded to a multi-room suite. The confusion and delay at the garage may
have had something to do with this extended courtesy. In any case, it was appreciated for our room
was spectacular. Like all the other
rooms, it too had been carved from the soft tufa stone so commonplace in this
area. The soft and indirect lighting, earth
tone coloring, unassuming furniture and soothing
music that filled the spaces created an intimate
atmosphere. Around the foot and sides of
our bed a simple wooden frame about two planks wide reminded me of a narrow
credenza while our headboard was literally that, a board, one each, angled up
against the wall behind the pillows (see photo album). A few steps down through an arched portal leading
from the main bedroom area brought us to a cantilevered landing. This suspended platform was bordered by glass
panels and overlooked additional hollowed-out rooms below us, one of which
contained the bare platform of a bed, it too made from what else but stone. An adjoining bathroom cavity outfitted with
modern fixtures completed the imaginative conversion of
our space in the side of the historic Matera ravine. Its sunflower showerhead, bigger than a
serving platter, in a hollowed-out alcove of its own together with a long trough-like
stone sink certainly marked it as one of a kind.
Now with an appreciation for our room we were soon outside eager to begin exploring the unique
environment we found all about us. Like
a marble spun around the inside of a bowl seeking the stability of the bottom we
walked the perimeter of the Sassi gradually descending along worn steps, found
here and there, until we eventually reached the bottom. We were at this for hours, taking time to investigate
every curiosity and shop we chanced upon in addition to a few 'hydration stops'
at several cafes to sample the wine and stuzzichini
(Italian bar snacks).
By
nightfall from our hotel vantage point
the Sassi valley and on up along the opposite side wall of the canyon glimmered
and blinked with lights like a living crèche. As old as it is, here where history is so
long, it continues to invent itself even
today. Renovated homes, modern apartments
and small hotels abound throughout this World Heritage Site. Here and there across this pre-history
community, evidence that change is
afoot is also apparent from the satellite
dishes, shaded verandas and colorful flowered terraces, cafes, autos and
restaurants that pepper the settlement. Today,
Matera lives in the limelight of its past enjoying a burst in economic development - nowhere near what it was like
throughout the majority of its distressing history. Now just short of neon signs, I wonder how
long it will hold to its past.
There
were many places to choose from for dinner that perfect evening. Since this would be our one dinner in this
historic community, to make it special, we wanted to indulge in its equally
historic flavors. Making our way to the
bottom of the trench we walked along Via Fiorentini and Via San Rocco reading
menus and peeking inside restaurants to help us decide. We opted for La Talpa (The Mole). Indeed,
it would have helped whoever had made it to have been mole-like. Typical of us, we were early. It was only 8pm. Still on the empty side we could have chosen
to sit anywhere. We decided on a table
off the main room in a cozy side cove of an adjacent hollowed out chamber. The
talpa had indeed been a busy excavator!
We
began by sharing a bottle of "Pervini
Primitivo di Manduria Archidamo", an inky tannic regional wine similar
to what many of us might be more familiar with as Zinfandel. Our waiter, in addition to a basket of pane, brought us a complimentary disk of
something similar to a thin, oiled, toasty-hot pizza crust all too easy to fill
up on. Maria Elena ate sparingly that
evening beginning with a classic Caprese Salad of the real thing, juicy buffalo
mozzarella, in addition to fresh tomatoes, basil leaves, all of it drizzled
with that mainstay, extra virgin olive oil.
Later she enjoyed a cheese plate of lightly seasoned pecorino cheese made
from ewe's milk presented with a side of honey.
According to the menu the honey came from the Pollino National Park, the
largest national park in the country. I
wondered whether the bees were aware of that fact and why it was significant enough
to warrant mentioning on the menu, but that's just me. After all that walking around I was far more
ambitious. I
began with orecchiette con straccetti di
cinghiale al surgo (pasta shaped like little ears in a regional sauce of
wild boar chunks) and then as 'secondi' enjoyed tagliate di filetto con rucola e grana (cut strips of beef fillet with arugula, called 'rocket' in Italia, and parmesan). Our dinner there in this cavernous grotto was
delightful - the only drawback being the climb once again back up all those
stone steps, bottom to top, following our meal!
Now more like a possum than a mole I climbed from the breach. With each step upward, the
restricted vanishing point of jagged silhouetted buildings along the rim when
seen from the bottom gradually gave way to an expanding star-streaked sky. Rising through this portal from pre-history
to modernity, we retreated to the comforts of our cave suspended in the ecliptic,
somewhere between the two.
During
our stay, we had opportunity to visit what are called ‘rupestrian’
churches. We learned that rupestrian, a
word that doesn't usually appear in a dictionary, meant "composed of rock" and indeed like everything in Matera, they
were. There in Matera where stone
is the story, these churches were not simply constructed of rocks
piled or mortared one atop another but instead painstakingly chiseled and
gouged from the rocky mountainsides themselves.
As Michelangelo was said to have believed, he was simply releasing the subject
of his sculpture already encased in each block of stone. I wondered if the stone masons of Matera could
have likewise believed that a church or monastery was hidden inside their tufa.
These
are not like churches we are familiar with today. They were relatively small, low-ceilinged, candle-lit
hollowed out spaces without pews where a congregation might be seated. With the purchase of a
combination ticket, we visited three of these deconsecrated ‘cave churches’,
the first being Santa Lucia Alle
Malve.
Santa
Lucia Alle Malve
is partially named after a plant that grows in the area,
which was eaten in periods of austerity.
To me this implied often. Santa
Lucia was first used by female Benedictine monks in the 9th century and thereafter
inhabited until 1960. A low or bas-relief
of Saint Lucia can be seen outside by the entrance. The church’s namesake, a young Sicilian martyr,
holds a chalice containing her eyes which were removed prior to her death during
the persecutions of 304 AD. The presence
of both Roman Catholic frescos and the remains of a Greek-orthodox iconostasis
(a wall of icons and religious paintings separating the nave from the sanctuary
in Greek churches) in the same church is evidence of the once close coupling in both
Greek and Roman Catholic religiosity.
We next visited Santa Maria de Idris, named for jugs and
other similar containers used in eons past to collect a precious commodity,
water. It was actually two churches in
one. By way of a small opening in the
wall to the left of the main altar, so low that I needed to duck, we found
ourselves inside the much older and far more primitive San Giovanni in Monterrone.
Itself a labor of timeless hands it was
full of hollows and niches. Void of
plaster saints only ancient frescos of saints and deteriorated fragments of
frescos, some over a thousand years old, remained.
Our final church stop was at Matera’s
largest rupestrian church, San Pietro
Barisano. This place of worship,
since its inception in the 12th century and like the others we'd
visited, had undergone numerous interventions in the form of enlargements,
modifications and additions. Unlike the
others, in 1755 this church had a facelift of sorts when a new facade and a
bell tower were added giving it its present day, more conventional look. The inside took up the rupestrian theme,
nonetheless, especially in the hollowed out spaces of the basement. Here once again, as we had experienced inside Castello
Aragonese on the island of Ischia (refer to blog archive, Meditations on Mortality, Mar '10), we came upon hollowed out spaces
used for the ritual of the 'draining corpses'. Inside a chamber of chiseled, stone, seat-like
niches, we too easily recognized where the bodies of deceased priests would sit
to be removed only when their decomposition was complete. Unsettling as it was, we moved quickly through
this macabre chamber and surprisingly surfaced behind the main alter. It was evident from the numerous empty frames
and missing altar pieces that at some point this church had been
vandalized. Whether
named for a plant eaten to survive, one remindful of precious water or one
disfigured by scavengers, each church had been a reminder of an inhospitable
world, something the fleeting visitor like ourselves is incapable of comprehending
no matter the number of times we might visit.
Captured, not as an insect in amber but in stone, stark yet beautiful Matera
is a testimony to survival.
On the morning
of the following day we walked through
Piazza Veneto on our way to the Carlo Levi museum located on the rim of
the Sassi inside Palazzo Lanfranchi. We were there to see Carlo Levi's Vulcania '61 - an extraordinary fresco
portrayal of the painful dehumanizing peasant world once the life-norm around
Matera. This stirring painting, a
picture of poverty depicting the hardship of an entire region was massive - 61
foot long by 10.5 foot high - taking up the length of the entire room. Interestingly, on the opposite wall were
photos of many of the scenes and individuals depicted in this wall of canvas. With exceptional skill Levi had woven them
into his masterpiece in a continuous storyboard fashion. As a graphic metaphor for a people brutalized by poverty, their faces illustrated
their grief and plight from the very first scene - a funeral and its mourners. Continuing to walk its length, we observed the forlorn looks of women
bearing ragged child in their arms, lumbering peasants returning from work-fields
they could never own along with groups of dejected, jobless men. With such an illustration, in addition to his
published works (e.g. Christ Stopped at
Eboli), Carlo made palpable to an uninformed world the plight of peasant
society caught in a dissolving culture of gentry over peasant that he'd
uncovered in southern Italy. Pictures
they say speak a thousand words; this mural would make a politician speechless
and demand resolution, which it had!
Leaving the Levi Museum we had lunch at La Grotto di Bacco, a small,
easy to miss wine pub on Vico Commercio.
We stumbled upon it. Actually, a
sign on a storefront on one street directed us around back to the entrance on
another street. We settled on the menu turistico (tourist menu) offer of
the day, a fairly-priced, three course meal that included wine. We enjoyed fresh Apulian pasta with cacioricotta cheese, salads and beef
chops in garlic, parsley and more cheese!
By this time, certainly by then certifiable members of some troglodyte rupestrian order (if there
ever was or will be one), it was, unfortunately, time to depart Matera. We took with us the memory of a place, which for all
that is now wonderful and pleasing about it, was formerly a terrible place, the
embodiment of despair - its economy founded on survival. There is a word, "wabi-sabi". It is not Italian, has nothing to do with interior
design or some sort of spicy condiment. Instead,
it has everything to do with the beauty of imperfection, of the primitive; a
beauty in things marred and humble. As
we discovered in Matera, it is a beauty appreciated in its tarnished unconventionality. It is of beauty, however, only if it remains
unchanged in the patina of its history.
Maybe just as another
line from a frown or a smile finds a
home on our faces, Matera will fittingly occupy some hollowed-out fold in our
brains. A memory of hospitality, certainly,
of starlight on whitish stone, certainly, and certainly of a people who in their
hollowed-out churches and homes scratched for a living and telling from the
number of churches clung to hope for a better life after death. Certainly these and many other impressions
floated in my head as I fell asleep in that modern grotto itself a comfortable contradiction
from how life had always been in Matera.
From the
Rogue Tourist,
Paolo
For related
photos (as well as those from other adventures ), click here on Eyes Over Italy. Then look
for and click on a photo album entitled “Asleep in a Grotto”.
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