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Trip to the past

In October I went back to Turkey to where I started to get interested in mosaics. It was a special pleasure to have 2 full days on my own to visit the 3 main mosaic places and indulge in these magnificent world of Byzantine mosaics. First I cued early to be the first one inside the Hagia Sophia to have an unobstructed view before the big crowd arrived.

The Great Palace mosaic museum, just behind the blue mosque, is always empty and a joy to appreciate the fine mosaics depicting nature and human life, one of the most beautiful mosaics found from the early Byzantine period (early 6 century CE) and beautifully displayed including very interesting explanations of the conservation process.

The late Byzantine mosaics 1303-1320 CE of the Chora Church are my favorites. Such fine works and lovingly depicted scenes of Stories the Bible are now to be viewed in full after years of conservation.

Joachim and Anna caressing their baby Mary. On the ceiling of the outer Narthex of Chora Church, Istanbul, early 14c CE.

On my walk across Istanbul in the now hip neighborhood Balat I came across a mosaic tiled facade of a house clearly from the 1960s. Later my friend Gaby sent me some photos of a wall mosaic designed in 1965 by famous artist Bedri Rahmi Eyuboglu at the IMC art center in Beyoğlu . The color palette is strikingly similar. Who inspired whom? Coincidence?

Then I spent a week at our house in Ayvalik discovering I had a fully equipped workshop there. So I happily started a little shrimp that didn’t make it into the mosaic floor in 2015.

This mosaic of 4m2 in roman technique I made in 2015. I started to write these mosaic blogs during that period of recreating a Roman mosaic floor. Please see my blog https://www.mosaicmoments.de

 

Starting to work in Beijing

This air vent structure is standing around in a beautiful spot under big plantain trees in our compound in Beijing. When I saw it I thought it would give a good object to decorate with mosaic. The management of the compound agreed and I set of to start to draw it, take measurements etc. My newly found old friend Sanny Wroblewski (whom I met already 5 years ago when we were posted in Turkey) joined me with her graphic design skills to turn the ugly cement blog into a dragon. The compound is named – Julong Hua Yuan – which means all dragons garden. One day we set off to get dragon- inspired.

That was fun. Now the work begins: finding tiles and cement, fibre netting and transparent adhesive, getting the tools and the production process ready. The idea is to involve the community of the compound. The tricky point is: its all in Chinese. Today with the help of my housekeeper Xu I talked to a tile selling company. It works like this: I write my points in English on the WeChat app to Xu, she translates it into Chinese in the app and then can chat with the tile manufacturer in the south of China on the Taobao platform which is the Ebay equivalent here. A bit complicated but it worked!

Mosaics in Beijing

And again …. mosaics are in my neighborhood. This mosaic is spread along the entire platform of our metro station Dongsi Shitiao of line 2, one of the oldest metro lines in Beijing. A nice research project for me to find out more about the artist and manufacturing workshop when I come back from holiday in September.