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    Classicism, Classicism,Classicism

    by Paul Henrickson, Ph.D.

    The Times of Malta came out with the following announcement:

    Sunday, 7th February 2010

    Reviving our roots (the endeavor as described by the title supplied by The Times of Malta)

    .A group of graduates and lecturers is planning to set up a Malta Classical Association with the aim of raising the profile ofClassics in Malta. This title suggested that the Classics had, in some way, originated here, or had, in ancient times, found roots

    here so I was quite interested to learn how that might be. Questions concerning the probability of there having been a Greek

    settlement here at one time kept recurring for the matter of the Greeks knowing of Ogygia was not in doubt only that thisterrafirmamight have had the experience of its culturecertainly the rest of the world has done over time so why should there not bephysical evidence of it in Malta. Why should, especially Gozo, to say nothing of Malta be singled out for a mere reference, anunsustainable reference written by a man whose personal and singular existence is also in doubt. It used to be a staple of local

    pride to report that if, for any reason, one needed to escape the notice of the world that Gozo would be the place to go to for no-one has ever heard of it and should a tracker, by chance, land here and to question the natives about a stranger he would learnabsolutely nothing at all. While, in fact, everyone knows everything the official social facade ignores realities when, because ofthe close knit familial relationship it is often thought best to ignore some unfortunate pecadillos

    All in all, while recognizing the contribution of A.A. Caruana in his late 19 th century research into what he reported as Greekstructures, subsequent research seems to indicate that those discoveries may have been more likely to have been Roman since theRomans used mortar and the Greeks did not.

    All of the above aside it is generally a profitable suit to study anything for it is not merely a virtue to keep the mind working, itseems to be both a physiological and psychological necessity to do so, it is also, as we may recently have learned, that it is asocio-political necessity to learn the truth. So, on that basis alone (which is considerable in any event) I support the efforts of the MaltaClasical Society and will do what I can to further it.

    All of the above aside, it is, in general, a profitable suit to study anything for it is not merely a virtue to keep the mind working it

    seems, as well, to be both a physiological and psychological necessity to do so. It is also, as we may recently have learned, that it is

    a socio-political necessity to learn the truth. So, on that basis alone (which is considerable in any event) I support the efforts of the

    Malta Classical Society and will do what I can to further it.

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    When I received word from somewhere(I shouldnt identify the source, for it would be too anamolously heuristic) that a professor at the University of

    Malta was either originating or was backing(it sounded like the former was the intended intepretation) an intellectual movement to establish somehereditory intellectual legitimacy for Malta in attempting to associate 21st century contemporary discourse on a subject with an

    earlier, or, in this case, a non-existant, unreal cause. I now think it more likely that, as elsewhere, the interest in the classical spirit

    gets revived from time to time and that in the case of Malta, more specifically Gozo, while the Greeks seem to have known about

    Gozo, as witness their references to Calypso and Odysseus and Dido and Aeneas, but from such evidence we should not conclude

    that the Greeks had settled Britain or that Henry Purcell was Greek. There has been little, if any, scholarly researched evidence

    except that of A.A. Caruana dated 1888. However, the following extracted from an online ecyclopedia states: theGreeks laid their

    masonry without mortar but with joints cut to great exactness. Marble was not generally used until the 5th cent. B.C. Where coarse stonework

    or crude bricks were used, a coating, composed of marble dust and lime rubbed and highly polished, was applied to them. Even marble itself

    was sometimes so treated. Although it was long thought that buildings in ancient Greece retained the unbroken white of the marble, in fact

    colors and gilding were customarily applied to emphasize decorative sculpture and certain details; remaining traces of these have been

    found. Having discovered in the simple column and lintel an adequate method of construction, they used it exclusively, drawing from it the

    maximum of dignity and beauty.

    It becomes a rather hairy maneuver to reattach a post-event label to a specific priorly existant period, whether or not historical, and

    expect thinking students not to recognize the essential plastic nature of the effort. In short, and more to the point, wouldnt it be

    logical to query the intention of any of the various generative forces in an epoch (5thC.B.C. Greece, for eample) whether they became,

    what we later identify them to have become, had been their initial intention to be? Did they have any identifiable intention at all? It

    seems, as in so many of my classes at University, I am raising non-classical considerations about a subject whose classical

    characteristics are a factor of the discussion itself and have little,if anything, to do with the ostenstensible subject, which is, by

    faulty definition, fifth century Greece. No matter, really, no matter what the subject the factorial analysis seems always to obscure

    experiential evidencenot unlike a cat covering its exrement. The classicist linguistic maneuver to limit meaning, with all honors to

    Wittgenstein, moves the focus of the subject from the subject to the language about the subject which becomes the new subject

    and the socially acceptable rational for a Ph.D.and in this process looses meaning, although it might, later on, regain it.

    In my experience Malta excells in only one socially acceptable expression of personal achievement and that is its vocally projected

    volume. By way of contrast it is difficult for me to identify one proper Bostonian who ever became an opera singer. In Malta it is far

    from being unusual. There is yet another characterstic, however, which fails to achieve the level of respectability of the operatic

    voice and that is its (Maltas) drive for guilt ridden paranoid effort to achieve public notice in any of the various endeavors to which

    it aspires of which there are many. The touting of the circus barker far exceeds any measureably legitimate performance. And the

    obverse side of that coin reveals the portrait of the anti-hero, that is, no one but a Maltese is worthy of recognitionin Malta that

    is.unless the individual such as Caravaggio (who was Italian) and (who was British) their reputations appear incontestable, quite

    impossible to ignorein which case such individuals quickly become products of the Maltese environment they were petri-bred in

    Malta. The need for universal admiration is so dire that the legitimate ways of achieving it have long been forgotten in favor ofcontrived hype. Unfortunately, those who have reconized this as the modus operendi are rarely able to recognize legitimate

    achievement and when they do they discount itif it resides in a non-Maltese. As of this date the most recent expression of this

    quite nearly psychotic phenomenon is the announcement, as of April 9, 2010 (a most powerful series numerically), of the formation of

    the Malta Classics Association.

    In this regard, in respect to its title, its identification label, I remain uncertain as to whether this organization identifies itself as an

    orgnization of individuals interested in classical Malta, (which is a question of historical origination) or an Association in Malta of individuals

    interested in the classics (which posses a concern of quite d ifferent matter, that is, one of aesthetics)and then, of course, whose aesthetics? Well, it is

    certain that without acomplishing anything at all that might by way of an intended or expected product the annoucement alone has

    already proved its heuristic potency. All of which goes, perhaps, to indicate that where there is an action there is also a reaction. I,

    for example would not have been induced to preparing a response if there hadnt been something peculiar about the proposal.

    And what I suspect I intuitively sensed about this present classical interest was its consistency with Maltas history, most

    especially that of Gozo, or Ogygia, the home of the underground and water nymph Calypso, or, in Greekwhich means tocover, conceal, hide way, and, by extension of course unobserved, so, having be social expression of this response might be:

    me too, do not forget about me is quite understandable in the need for personal affirmaton and also the functioning of the

    abstract conceptions of social order as one generally sees it in governance, intelletual activity and law courts. These make of Malta

    not a reality but an opinion. In Maltas defense it might be added that, in this regard Malta is up todate, but by default, of course,

    not by any effort of its own.

    Now, for a person like myself, who sought a refuge from a criminal and oppressive reality elsewhere Gozo, or Ogygia, is just the

    place to be where, hidden away, I might have the opportunity undetected to give expression to who I am, or, who I want to bea

    time away from anywhere to use in a reherasal for a later and more perfect performance.

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    It is largely in this light that I view the present effort to legitimize the Maltese ethos by attempting to establish classical

    connections. In so far as I know there is no evidence of classical (or non-classical) Greek achievement on these islands while there ismore impressive prehistoric achievements which predate the Egyptian and raise, in my view, extremely important questions

    regarding the relationship between architecture and social organization The dating and understanding of

    the various phases of activity in the temples is not easy. The main problem found, I have been told, is that the sites themselves

    are evolutionary in nature, in that each successive temple brought with it further refinement to architectural development which is

    what one turistic promotional source brings to our attention. The consensus is that these structures predate the Egyptian

    architectural contribution. UR,c.18THc.B.C. The Pyramids of Gizah c. 2,600 B.C.

    My question has been how is it the structues on Malta appear so much more organic

    [Maltese Egyptian Greek]in conception than those of Ur , Gizah, or elswhere,and why did this architetural form disappear? One is tempted to consider the possible relationship between

    architetural form and either matriarchal or patriarchal social systems.

    Encyclopedic sources tell us that for the works or study of works from classical antiquity, seeClassicsClassicism, in thearts, refers

    generally to a high regard forclassical antiquity, as setting standards for taste which the classicists seeks to emulate.[As for the

    matter of taste which is a very real factor of course, where dicussion of this type take place, but, in practice it becomes very illusory] The art of

    classicism typically seeks to be formal and restrained. This definition of classisim is the one generally used whether or not it

    applies to any Greek period. That period of Greekproduction which is generally identified as classical took many decades, perhaps

    two or three centuries, to develop and lasted, one might say, for no longer than a half century before it, once again, mutated along

    the line of its initial impetus which was the ever increasingly detailed representaton of a physical reality, that is one that made no

    editorial comment on the physical condition of that mortality, or atypical physical appearance. It is in this respect that the Egyptian

    and the Greek dvelopements were coincident in their aims at some points. The technical excellence and exellence of observation of

    Egypt exceeded that of Greece at most points and by the time the technical excellence of Greece achieved that of Egypt Greecehad already moved on to a yet another aesthetic dimension and in a shorter period of time than the Eyptian. It should be pointed

    out, as well, that there is evidence indicating that where individual physical anomalies did occur in the person they were eliminated

    in the fabrication of their official images. Now, whether the element of time in its relation to development of a culture has more

    meaning to its political formulation than to its aesthetically formal one has yet, I think, to be investigated. However, as things stand

    it does seem to appear that the aesthetic rule of thumb for Egypt was that of authoritya desendent authority, and that of Greece as

    one of individual investigative interest for it is with the Classical Greek that the remains of Greek effort include the names of

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    individuals. So, while Egypts expression remained static that of Greece had, already by the 1st.century

    BC gone into decline so that in the end it might be observed that

    while technical excellence was encouraged in Egypt it was restrained and the pyrotechnics of the show off unknown.

    As this map of the Eastern Mediterranean indicates the various stages of Greek, or succeeding cultures that were Greek influenced

    not one of them over period nearly three quarters of a milleneum ever left any material evidence of there having been any classical

    Greek influence, direct or indirect on the island of Malta. Even Paul of Tarsus who, it has been reported, as having been ship-wrecked on Malta failed to mention anything of the sort that had been reported. Now, there is a troublesome local legend that

    Calypso kept Odeysseus comfortable over a period of seven years in a cave just down the street from my house, but I have not

    heard of anyone finding any material evidence that would support the claim. In any event, there appear to be no ruins that would

    help us settle the matter and I am, consequently, encouraged to believe that the founding of this organization is another of the

    numerous efforts on the part of many contemporaneous Maltese to give both legitimacy , however false. and dignity to their claims

    of and search for self-respect. My advice to them, were I to be asked, would be to follow the advice of Polonious to Laertes.

    There may always be some danger when one attempts to reduce experienced reality to an equation, but if it helps to clarify a point

    let me present the following graphic devices as a starting point: on the left we have what we might call classic

    lines, simple, regular, unemotional, straight forward and on th right we have a breadth of expression, extremes in texture, variety

    of direction and dramatised opposition. In short, there is the antithesis of the classical.

    These characteistics might also be observed here in a pair of works that made their appearance some 1,750 years later and only

    200 years apart. One by the Frenchman Jacques Louis David and the oher by the Dutchman Willem DeKooning.

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    Jacques Louis David Willem DeKooning

    Jacques Louis David was, perhaps the best known exponent of the neo-classical style developed in Europe and in this work the

    attachment to the romance of classicism is apparent in the subject matter, The Death of Scorates over, it appears, of all things,

    an educational philosophy. The equanimity with which Socrates approached his death and the cup of posionous hemlock being

    handed him, the technical clarity of the work, the unadorned clothing, the controlled grief of the man in the doorway all speak of

    what has been considered as the classical attitude and the very word itself, classical is so strongly welded to the popular idea of

    Greece that the two are quite inseparable. If David exemplifies the Apollonian DeKooning certainly does the Dionesian in what he

    makes and how he perceives the womankind about him in his mind, background or environment, if not in how he behaves as a

    social person. Would it be permissable to indicate that with David the expressive vehicle is control and that with deKooning it is not

    unlike the Rogers and Hammerstein musical Carousel in the song about spring. June is Busting Out All Overhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0I-790dGx-o

    The following appears to be a cautious approach to the identification of a critical area of study. I can, however, imagine that there

    may be some who would find its suggested parameters too vaugely defined, too unretrained in its own classical

    properties to be acceptable, but, in the sprit of a ten year-old male wishing to pilfer apples , I would like to

    assay the potential of explorative behavior in testing the tolerance of the accepable borderlines.

    To begin with the expression a high regard for classical antiquity suggests a strong, non-objective, and prejudicial position so

    there are, in consequence, some positions which are definitively non grata. However, I shall risk admitting to

    a greatly substantial admiration for a performance of Aristophanes Lysistrata given at the

    amphitheatre below the Athenian Acropolis in 1973. The performance, as one might expect, given the

    circumstances, was delivered in Greek a language about which, at that time, I knew very little, yet, the

    soliloquy delivered by the principle character had been so intensly focused I was under the impression I

    understood every word. This suggests an interesting point, that is, that there is more to comprehension thanthe understanding of the language.

    Classicism

    We have been advised that for the works or study of works from classical antiquity, seeClassicsClassicism, in thearts, refers

    generally to a high regard forclassical antiquity, as setting standards for taste which the classicists seeks to emulate. The art of

    classicism typically seeks to be formal and restrained. It can also refer to the other periods of classicism. Classicism is a force which

    is always present in post-medieval European and European influenced traditions, however, some periods felt themselves more

    connected to the classical ideals than others, particularly theAge of Reason, theAge of Enlightenmentand some movements

    inModernism. The force in particular formed movements labelled "classical" or were referred from the perspective of the 20th

    century as having been classical. This includesclassical economicsandclassical physics, both of which were related to the more

    general ideals of classicism from that time period.

    The majority of art historians and classicists today believe that the model for the Greek kouros can be found in Ancient Egypt,

    where such sculpture did exist. They do share frontalism (the

    rather stiff forward stidingpose)as an aspect.

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    During what might be called Greeces Golden Age however, the very strict classicism of Egypt was forgotten or a different

    understanding of the human being emerged and found sublime expression in delivering the body from its block.

    Polyklitus SCOPAS

    CYCLADIC= PROTO-GREEK revealing the characteristics of classical reductionism

    and divergent expression as in the harp player

    HENRICKSON admits that both the classical and the expressive

    play a role.

    Michelangelos slave(left) remains unfinsihed. This probably not what he had intended it to

    look like BUT, as it is it as been quite probably more creatively influential than it otherwise

    would have been. Just as 19th century ignorance about painted Greek statuary was intrumental

    in creating, once again, an entirely unintended resulting judgment so that, consquently several

    generations have been born, matued and gone believing that the pure and beautiful was white

    and not painted brightly.

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    Calamis

    Alexander SCOPAS Individuation vs. the ideal and emergesvictorious..temporarily.

    ? Elvis Presly Kumsal Sezen

    Some how or other it occurs to me that in the formal dissolution of classical primciples such as balance, proportion, symmetry one

    meets in the field of battle between Apollo and Dionysis, the orderly and the dissolute, good and evil, God and Satan and in the

    resultant morass we must find our individual ways..with help, on occasion.

    I have included in this discussion the image of the, presumably, unfinished slave of Michelnagelo. It was intended for the Tomb of

    Pope Julius II but despite Michelangelos being quite nearly constantly at work, there were times, and he complained about then,

    when he was simply overwhelmed. However, for this accident of time and events we, today in the 20 th & 21st centuries would not

    have been exposed to yet another aesthetic dimension enlarging, thereby our vocabulary for affective experience. One assumes

    that had Michelangelo completed this slave as he may have intended it it would not now be an exquiste example of order

    emeging out of chaos, form out of nothing, Except, and this is a part of the enigma, what we actually see, the thing we perceive, is

    there for us to see it. It is there. It wast what was intended, but it is there and had it been there as intended my wager is that it

    would have been less instructive, impressive and rewarding. Out of the battle between Apollo and Dionysis comes a new

    formulation.

    i

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hermes_Logios_Altemps_33.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jupiter_Smyrna_Louvre_Ma13.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Omphalos_Apollo_Musei_Capitolini_MC638.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hermes_Logios_Altemps_33.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jupiter_Smyrna_Louvre_Ma13.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Omphalos_Apollo_Musei_Capitolini_MC638.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hermes_Logios_Altemps_33.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jupiter_Smyrna_Louvre_Ma13.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Omphalos_Apollo_Musei_Capitolini_MC638.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hermes_Logios_Altemps_33.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jupiter_Smyrna_Louvre_Ma13.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Omphalos_Apollo_Musei_Capitolini_MC638.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hermes_Logios_Altemps_33.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jupiter_Smyrna_Louvre_Ma13.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Omphalos_Apollo_Musei_Capitolini_MC638.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hermes_Logios_Altemps_33.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jupiter_Smyrna_Louvre_Ma13.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Omphalos_Apollo_Musei_Capitolini_MC638.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hermes_Logios_Altemps_33.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jupiter_Smyrna_Louvre_Ma13.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Omphalos_Apollo_Musei_Capitolini_MC638.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hermes_Logios_Altemps_33.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jupiter_Smyrna_Louvre_Ma13.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Omphalos_Apollo_Musei_Capitolini_MC638.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hermes_Logios_Altemps_33.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jupiter_Smyrna_Louvre_Ma13.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Omphalos_Apollo_Musei_Capitolini_MC638.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hermes_Logios_Altemps_33.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jupiter_Smyrna_Louvre_Ma13.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Omphalos_Apollo_Musei_Capitolini_MC638.jpg
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    Callimachus (katatxitechnos) Roman?If we focus our attention more on hedrapery of these two figures our attept to clarify the concept of what is classical and what is notmay become more clear. On theleft the drapery hangs from a still and tranquil body form. On the right the drapery appears, or is made to suggest to us that the

    figure is or has been very recently in rather active movement and that the drapery has responded to that movement. It is that

    movement, that pictorial drama which breaks away from the classical notion of balance and that notion is carried over, as well, into

    certain architectural details, as in the Corinthian column pictured here. and certainly in this scene of a

    bludgeoning of a satyr where the forms, the motion, the disquieting subject matter and all, with the

    exxception of the technical execution required of the sculptor when dealing with the marble,underscores action which is by

    defintion, not in balance, or, at least, series of alternating out of and resumed balances.

    Kritios SCOPAS Venus of MaltaDolly Parton

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:009MA_Kritios.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Agrigente_museum_ephebe.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Harmodius_and_Aristogeiton.jpghttp://search.babylon.com/imageres.php?iu=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&ir=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/menuglossary/corinthian.htm&ig=http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:XSpVxVvBRYIXrM::www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&h=368&w=293&q=corinthian%20capital&babsrc=conduithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/M%C3%A9nade_relieve_romano_(Museo_del_Prado)_02.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Venus-kallimah_pushkin.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:009MA_Kritios.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Agrigente_museum_ephebe.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Harmodius_and_Aristogeiton.jpghttp://search.babylon.com/imageres.php?iu=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&ir=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/menuglossary/corinthian.htm&ig=http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:XSpVxVvBRYIXrM::www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&h=368&w=293&q=corinthian%20capital&babsrc=conduithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/M%C3%A9nade_relieve_romano_(Museo_del_Prado)_02.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Venus-kallimah_pushkin.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:009MA_Kritios.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Agrigente_museum_ephebe.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Harmodius_and_Aristogeiton.jpghttp://search.babylon.com/imageres.php?iu=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&ir=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/menuglossary/corinthian.htm&ig=http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:XSpVxVvBRYIXrM::www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&h=368&w=293&q=corinthian%20capital&babsrc=conduithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/M%C3%A9nade_relieve_romano_(Museo_del_Prado)_02.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Venus-kallimah_pushkin.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:009MA_Kritios.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Agrigente_museum_ephebe.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Harmodius_and_Aristogeiton.jpghttp://search.babylon.com/imageres.php?iu=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&ir=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/menuglossary/corinthian.htm&ig=http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:XSpVxVvBRYIXrM::www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&h=368&w=293&q=corinthian%20capital&babsrc=conduithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/M%C3%A9nade_relieve_romano_(Museo_del_Prado)_02.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Venus-kallimah_pushkin.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:009MA_Kritios.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Agrigente_museum_ephebe.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Harmodius_and_Aristogeiton.jpghttp://search.babylon.com/imageres.php?iu=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&ir=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/menuglossary/corinthian.htm&ig=http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:XSpVxVvBRYIXrM::www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&h=368&w=293&q=corinthian%20capital&babsrc=conduithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/M%C3%A9nade_relieve_romano_(Museo_del_Prado)_02.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Venus-kallimah_pushkin.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:009MA_Kritios.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Agrigente_museum_ephebe.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Harmodius_and_Aristogeiton.jpghttp://search.babylon.com/imageres.php?iu=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&ir=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/menuglossary/corinthian.htm&ig=http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:XSpVxVvBRYIXrM::www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&h=368&w=293&q=corinthian%20capital&babsrc=conduithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/M%C3%A9nade_relieve_romano_(Museo_del_Prado)_02.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Venus-kallimah_pushkin.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:009MA_Kritios.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Agrigente_museum_ephebe.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Harmodius_and_Aristogeiton.jpghttp://search.babylon.com/imageres.php?iu=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&ir=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/menuglossary/corinthian.htm&ig=http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:XSpVxVvBRYIXrM::www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&h=368&w=293&q=corinthian%20capital&babsrc=conduithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/M%C3%A9nade_relieve_romano_(Museo_del_Prado)_02.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Venus-kallimah_pushkin.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:009MA_Kritios.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Agrigente_museum_ephebe.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Harmodius_and_Aristogeiton.jpghttp://search.babylon.com/imageres.php?iu=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&ir=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/menuglossary/corinthian.htm&ig=http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:XSpVxVvBRYIXrM::www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&h=368&w=293&q=corinthian%20capital&babsrc=conduithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/M%C3%A9nade_relieve_romano_(Museo_del_Prado)_02.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Venus-kallimah_pushkin.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:009MA_Kritios.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Agrigente_museum_ephebe.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Harmodius_and_Aristogeiton.jpghttp://search.babylon.com/imageres.php?iu=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&ir=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/menuglossary/corinthian.htm&ig=http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:XSpVxVvBRYIXrM::www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&h=368&w=293&q=corinthian%20capital&babsrc=conduithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/M%C3%A9nade_relieve_romano_(Museo_del_Prado)_02.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Venus-kallimah_pushkin.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:009MA_Kritios.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Agrigente_museum_ephebe.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Harmodius_and_Aristogeiton.jpghttp://search.babylon.com/imageres.php?iu=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&ir=http://www.pitt.edu/~medart/menuglossary/corinthian.htm&ig=http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:XSpVxVvBRYIXrM::www.pitt.edu/~medart/image/glossary/corinthian.jpg&h=368&w=293&q=corinthian%20capital&babsrc=conduithttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/M%C3%A9nade_relieve_romano_(Museo_del_Prado)_02.jpghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Venus-kallimah_pushkin.jpg
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    HEIGEA

    IVAN MESTROVIC

    Ivan Mestrovic is another artist whose work exhibits charateristics of both the ideal

    and the individual, but , it seems, in Mestrovic the ideal in man is constrained by ideal geometry as though to indicate you have

    freedom, but within limits.

    Perhaps what all the evidence above is signalling is that Malta, and most especially Gozo, will finally emerge out of its historic

    isolation and promote the creative and intellectual leadership the world requires. After all, it has been maintained that all the world

    really needs is one good idea.

    MALTA CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION

    From: Malta Classical Association [mailto:[email protected]]

    Sent: Sunday, April 04, 2010 3:36 PM

    Subject: Malta Classics Association

    Dear recipient,

    I have been instructed by Mrs Maria Zammit of Lija to write to you about the Malta Classics Association. The basic facts about the Association

    are outlined here:

    http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20100207/education/reviving-our-roots

    http://www.um.edu.mt/malti/ahbarijiet#item_88169

    http://www.um.edu.mt/newsoncampus/features#item_88001

    We are in the process of setting up the Classics Association. In fact, on April 9th, all those who have expressed an interest in the Association are

    invited to come to the Archaeology farmhouse at university (at 18:30) where we shall hold our first general meeting to elect the committee.

    http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20100207/education/reviving-our-rootshttp://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20100207/education/reviving-our-rootshttp://www.um.edu.mt/malti/ahbarijiet#item_88169http://www.um.edu.mt/malti/ahbarijiet#item_88169http://www.um.edu.mt/newsoncampus/features#item_88001http://www.um.edu.mt/newsoncampus/features#item_88001http://www.um.edu.mt/newsoncampus/features#item_88001http://www.um.edu.mt/malti/ahbarijiet#item_88169http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20100207/education/reviving-our-roots
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    The committee will then finalise the statute and start working in earnest. The Association will be formally launched on July 29th.

    Our goals are to promote the study of Latin and Classical Greek. This will be done by holding numerous events comprising:

    1) public lectures on the classical world

    2) public readings of Latin and Greek literature (a lot of these readings will be in Latin and Greek)

    3) plays from the ancient playwrights

    4) poetry recitations

    5) Courses in Latin and Greek

    6) the production of an academic journal and a general newsletter

    7) co-operating with schools and colleges to encourage students to study Greek and Latin at some level or other.

    If you are interested in joining the Association, let us know and we'll include your email address in our database. You are invited to the first

    general meeting but it is important that you confirm your attendance by noon on Monday 5th April. If you do not confirm your attendance we

    shall assume that you will not be coming. The Archaeology Farmhouse is to be found here:

    http://maps.google.com/maps?q=35.90145,14.481026&num=1&t=h&sll=35.897508,14.482521&sspn=0.018078,0.032015&ie=UTF8&ll=35.901

    105,14.481483&spn=0.002312,0.005681&z=18

    There is ample parking behind the farmhouse.

    Finally, if you have no interest the Association please let us know so that we may delete your email address from our contact list. This will

    prevent you from receiving our emails unnecessarily.

    regards and thanks

    Joseph Anthony Debono

    http://maps.google.com/maps?q=35.90145,14.481026&num=1&t=h&sll=35.897508,14.482521&sspn=0.018078,0.032015&ie=UTF8&ll=35.901105,14.481483&spn=0.002312,0.005681&z=18http://maps.google.com/maps?q=35.90145,14.481026&num=1&t=h&sll=35.897508,14.482521&sspn=0.018078,0.032015&ie=UTF8&ll=35.901105,14.481483&spn=0.002312,0.005681&z=18http://maps.google.com/maps?q=35.90145,14.481026&num=1&t=h&sll=35.897508,14.482521&sspn=0.018078,0.032015&ie=UTF8&ll=35.901105,14.481483&spn=0.002312,0.005681&z=18http://maps.google.com/maps?q=35.90145,14.481026&num=1&t=h&sll=35.897508,14.482521&sspn=0.018078,0.032015&ie=UTF8&ll=35.901105,14.481483&spn=0.002312,0.005681&z=18http://maps.google.com/maps?q=35.90145,14.481026&num=1&t=h&sll=35.897508,14.482521&sspn=0.018078,0.032015&ie=UTF8&ll=35.901105,14.481483&spn=0.002312,0.005681&z=18

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