Members Foyer - Rio Societies
Transcription
Members Foyer - Rio Societies
International Club of Rio de Janeiro May 2011 e& m o C Us! n i Jo Get Your Tickets! The Lapa Steps Rio de Janeiro: A French Obsession General Meeting April 2011 General Meeting Friday, 29 April Paissandu Club Avenida Afrânio de Melo Franco 330, Leblon Starting at 10.30 am A trip back in history Art Meets Nature in Brumadinho 3.000-Acre Art Park and Museum Guest Speakers: Members Foyer Pia Granjon-Lecerf & Lauriane Whittaker "Clinical Psychology and Life Coaching: What Are These Two Professions About?" New members , birthdays & more Taste of Rio 2011 Friday, May 20, 8 pm - midnight www.incrio.org.br May 2011 The ECHO 2 This Month 3 Welcome 10 A warm welcome by InC President, Mary Pinner, who gives an update of all the current InC activities and Board current affairs. Taste of Rio 2011 4 7 8 Don't miss out on the event of the year. Buy your tickets now for Taste of Rio 2011 to be held in Leblon Friday night May 20, for your chance to sample more than 20 of Rio's favorite restaurants. Photo Gallery Visit to the “workshop" of the War & Peace painting by 20 th century Brazilian Painter Portinari on 7th of April and happy faces onboard a Brazilian navy ship. Members Foyer We welcome new members and congratulate our May birthdays including details of a Cultural Coffee and Rio Tour organized by Beatrice Labonne and much more. 11 14 16 Reviewing & Rating Two more restaurants have been tried and tested by our members. Let us know about the restaurants you visit and participate in reviewing and rating. Art Meets Nature in Brumadinho One more place to visit: Inhotim, near Belo Horizonte, induces a wondrous, trance-like state, and given its 500+ works by more than 100 different artists, requires at least a day to be seen in full. Calendar Date, time and location details of scheduled InC events in calendar format. Pia GranjonLecerf and Lauriane Whittaker are the speakers at the April GM. Those who make it happen Names and contact details of the Executive Board members and all InC Coordinators. TASTE OF RIO 2011 Friday, 20 May from 8.00 pm in Alto Leblon Buy Your Tickets Now! Online www.incrio.org.br or at any InC event scheduled before 20 May for all the latest information on the growing list of participating restaurants and other catering providers and to warm up to our increasing list of wonderful raffle prizes to be won on the evening: www.tasteofrio.blogspot.com Welcome May 2011 The ECHO 3 in The ECHO Hi Everyone, The excitement is growing now that Taste of Rio is almost upon us! May 20 is the date, at Clube Federal in Alto Leblon, from 8 p.m. until midnight. We have wonderful restaurants with cuisines from around the world; we have top of the line cachaça, plus wine and soft drinks; we have a breathtaking venue and fabulous raffle prizes . . . now all we need is you! Tickets are on sale now! Just visit the InC website, or come to any of our meetings, or send an email to [email protected] – all these are easy ways to make your reservation and assure your place for this not-to-be-missed event! (Remember, tickets will not be available at the door.) You can find much more information about the event at www.tasteofrio.blogspot.com. Support your club by inviting your friends and neighbors, your colleagues from work, your teacher, your acquaintances from the gym – the more the merrier, and every ticket sold means more funds for our charities! We still need volunteers to help us with some of the last-minute tasks. As we have said before, we don’t need a lot of your time – but a couple of hours on the days leading up to the event would be a tremendous help. Again, just send an email to [email protected] and you can be sure we’ll get back in touch with your promptly! The first of our planned Speaker Series will be held on Thursday, September 28, and it already promises to be a big success. This first session will address banking, credit cards, international monetary transactions and other financial and banking issues that we all face in our day to day lives in Brazil. We are very appreciative of the knowledgeable representatives from HSBC who have offered to provide us with numerous tips and useful information. I for one certainly still have a lot of questions, even after having lived here for several years now! And many thanks to Anna Whyte and Brenda Edwards for organizing this timely and informative event. Keep your eyes open for the next in the series --- it is scheduled for June and more information will be available very soon. line Dead O CH The E sletter New June May y, 20 a d i r F on at No Also keep your eyes open for more great cultural tours and events. Beatrice Labonne, has scheduled two more events for May, a cultural coffee on the subject “Libya as we saw it: from an expat compound and the window of a tour bus” scheduled for May 5, and a second tour on May 17 titled “Life and customs in Rio during the 19th century and the influence of the Royal Court ” which will visit some of the oldest neighborhoods of Rio and will end with a tour of the famous Granado store in Centro, Rua Primeiro de Marco, followed by an optional lunch. This tour will be conducted by renowned and incredibly knowledgeable Rio historian Milton Teixeira (with translations by InC members). For more details, see the notices here in the Echo, in the InConnection, or on our website. And, as always: please feel free to get in touch with anyone on the InC Executive Board if you have any ideas, suggestions, thoughts or even criticism. The Board works hard to make the club valuable to its members, and your input only increases its value! Warmest regards and mil beijos, Mary Pinner May 2011 The ECHO Taste of Rio 2011 Members and non-members welcome so bring your friends and enjoy the evening...no other event puts over 20 of Rio's favorite restaurants under one roof so you can sample the flavors of Rio, enjoy wine and caipirinhas, at no additional charge! Make your reservation and assure your place for this not-to-be-missed event. You can buy your tickets in various ways: Buy online via InC website: www.incrio.org.br or Come to any of InC’s meetings prior to Taste of Rio or Send email to [email protected] TICKETS ARE ON SALE NOW! Tickets will not be available at the door! Check www.tasteofrio.blogspot.com for the latest on participating restaurants and raffle prizes. If you have a moment to spare, come join a team at the beautiful Clube Federal in the days leading up to the event. You can help with: Wetting Your Appetite Just a selection of gastronomic & drinks providers who have confirmed their participation: Decorations Packing goodie bags And lots of other details that go into making a fabulous event. Contact Louise Green at: [email protected] or Brenda Edwards at: [email protected] Las Enchiladas Benkei Cais do Oriente Casa da Feijoda Chico & Alaíde Espirito Santa Estilo Gourmet Fazenda Geneve Francis Chocolates Gringo Café Insolito (Buzios) Intihuas La Frabique Rota 66 Sabor Colombiano Telhado Azul Zona Zen Cachaça Leblon Coca-Cola Segafredo Café Hannover Wines Raffle Prize News Lufthansa: 2 tickets Rio de Janeiro - Frankfurt Amsterdam Sauer: jewelry Windsor Hotels: Weekend Atlantica Hotel Sunday Brunch Barra Hotel Breakfast Excelsior Hotel Gabriel Bertazzoli: painting Dila Vidal: painting Cachoiera Inn - Buzios: Weekend for two Françoise Sztajn: guided tour in Rio for two Peg Peter: private photo session Luiz Salvador Ceramica: vase Kilaqua Joias: jewelry Coca-Cola: collector’s item …….. And many more 4 May 2011 The ECHO 5 Rio de Janeiro: a French Obsession If the French had not settled in the Bay of Rio in the 16th century, the city would never have been founded. This is not to say that the Portuguese were unaware of Baía da Guanabara (Guanabara Bay), as the area is known. They had cruised along the shore, but the bay had not interested them. The vast territory which was to become Brazil had been officially claimed by Portugal in 1500 when its fleet, under the command of Pedro Álvares Cabral, landed in Porto Seguro 1100 km north of today’s Rio. Actually, a couple of months earlier a Spaniard named Pinzón, a companion of Cristobal Columbus, had landed further north. But, a Spanish-Portuguese treaty had already earmarked the territory for Portugal. Coast of Brazil circa 1519 The Portuguese claim didn’t prevent Dutch, Spanish and French navigators to maraud along the coast in search of Pau-Brasil, Brazilian wood valued at the time for its red dye. Then in 1550, a French aristocrat named Nicolas Durand de Villegagnon entered the Guanabara Bay with two ships and six hundred soldiers and colonialists. He built the small Coligny fort on a tiny island which now bears his name. Villegagnon’s purpose was not to plunder natural resources but to settle. He founded the France Antarctique colony. Villegagnon was a colorful character even by 16th century standards. His CV is impressive; he started his military career as a Knight of Malta and fought the Turkish fleet in the Mediterranean Sea. Villegagnon was also a scientist, explorer, entrepreneur and adventurer, the last two occupations probably being the same thing. He was born a Catholic but had been drawn to the Reformation of Jean Calvin. His religious beliefs are still a matter of argument as they might have changed with his luck. France Antarctique, 1555 First mass celebrated at Fort Coligny; Villegagnon is shown at right. The purpose of France Antarctique colony was to have a place to settle Swiss Protestants and French Huguenots along with some Catholics. During this period, France and other parts of Europe were at the stage of bloody sectarian violence between the dominant Catholic population and those who had recently embraced the Reformation. It was pure Utopian to believe that the two religious communities could live in peace on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean. As old habits die hard, soon after landing the colonialists started bickering, to the puzzlement of the local Tamoios Indians. Villegagnon left the island to seek reinforcements but never came back. The Portuguese army defeated the ragtag survivors in 1567. The French dreamland had lasted nearly ten years. Euphoric with his victory, Estácio de Sá, the young Portuguese commander, subsequently founded the city of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro, Rio for short. It was not a total loss for the French. To drop their territorial (Continued on page 6) May 2011 The ECHO Rio de Janeiro: a French Obsession (Continued from page 5) claim they received 30 000 gold ecus from the king of Portugal. The episode is purposely remembered when the cariocas, the citizens of Rio want to nag the Portuguese: a French Rio would have been so much more glamorous! Pirates and French, English and Dutch privateers continued to roam the coast of Brazil. Again the French had a knack to pick good spots. They traded with the Indians in the bays of Buzios and Cabo Frio not far from Rio. During the 20 th century, these two fishing villages became sophisticated resorts visited by the rich and famous, including French icon Brigitte Bardot. In 1612, once again the French landed in Brazil, this time in the far north. They named their new colony Equinoctial France and built the fort of Saint Louis named after the King of France. The settlement was short lived; it was rapidly conquered by the Portuguese in 1615 and renamed São Luis. For a short time, the city was also occupied by the Dutch. Brazilian coastal cities didn’t see much threatening French action until that fateful month of August 1710, when a Caribbean-born privateer named Jean Francois DuClerc tried to invade Rio. Gold had recently been discovered in the heartland of Brazil, in a region which became the state of Minas Gerais. Gold attracted the interest of DuClerc who wanted to endear himself with the Sun King. The king’s coffers were empty. DuClerc convinced the king to give him six ships and thousand and two hundred soldiers and sailors in order to invade Rio de Janeiro and steal its gold for France. Unfortunately, this straightforward plan went awfully awry. The Portuguese were tipped of DuClerc’s arrival and the entry of the port of Rio was heavily defended, compelling the French to land in the swampy Barra da Tijuca 20kms west of the city. They had to trek back under the heavy fire of the Portuguese defense. Four hundred soldiers were killed and the survivors were taken prisoners, DuClerc included. The later was taken to a Jesuit monastery on top of Castelo Hill (leveled during the early 20th century urban development). His new home was not to his liking. After arguing that he had no vocation to become a monk, he was moved to the house of a Portuguese officer in downtown Rio. In September, DuClerc was murdered by hooded men in mysterious circumstances. The debonair navy officer had probably been assassinated on the order of a jealous husband. Who knows, taking the oath of chastity might have spared DuClerc’s life. Not only was France still broke, but its self-image was severely bruised. Immediate retaliations seemed necessary. (Continued on page 12) 6 May 2011 The ECHO Photo Gallery PORTINARI EXHIBIT Guided tour of the restoration "workshop" of the War & Peace painting by 20 th century Brazilian Painter Portinari on 7th of April. The 14 m high painting was displayed until recently in the UN HQs in NYC. The building is currently closed for retrofitting. The Project Director showed the restoration techniques and the tour was followed by an art workshop; www.guerraepaz.org.br. In the Navy! Family Boat trip in the Guanabara Bay (Rio, Niteroi, etc) on board a Brazilian navy ship on 19th of March. Photos PORTINARI Exhibit by Gay Lynn Fox 7 May 2011 The ECHO Members Foyer Speakers Series When: 28 April, 7pm-9pm Where: Brasileirinho restaurant at the Hotel Debret , Avenida Atlântica, 3564 Copacabana 2522-0132 Things to know when living in Brazil! HSBC will be covering a range of topics about banking, settling up accounts in various countries and transferring funds between accounts, easily and quickly. No cost, no registration necessary - just come, enjoy the talk, and have a bite to eat if you wish. First caipirinha as well as a traditional Brazilian snack FREE, offered courtesy of our venue host. Cultural Coffee Morning When: Thursday May 5, 10 AM Where: Ana Paramo Lobeto’s home "Libya as we saw it: from an expat compound and the window of a tour bus." Ana Paramo Lobeto & Beatrice Labonne will share their Libyan experience. Ana will open her home in Ipanema for the talk. Refreshments will be served, cookies welcome. Sign up with [email protected] The Hotel Debret is located on the corner of Avenida Atlantica and Rua Almirante Gonçalves. Everyone welcome (InC & Non-InC Members). Tour Life and customs in Rio during the 19th century and the influence of the Royal Court. Tuesday, 17 May at 10.00 am Downton Rio Under the guidance of Milton Teixeira, the renowned historian and tour guide, we shall follow the steps of the Royal family during the 19th century. The tour will allow us to discover landmarks as well as more secret places where Brazilian history was made. The tour will end with a visit of the famous Granado store which was Emperor Pedro II's chemist. R$ 10 charitable contribution. Optional lunch will take place at Besi, restaurant & store for home and kitchen decor and accessories. www.besi.com.br & www.granado.com.br Information and sign-up with Beatrice Labonne at [email protected] Birthdays May Michelle Marie Hørmann Nielsen 1 Robin Hugh Evans 6 Angela Bardelli 11 Megan Almeida 15 Martina de Lange 18 Deborah Pamela Lamb 19 Katharina Germershausen 23 Margarita Mari 23 Glorisabel Garrido Thompson-Flôres 24 Lorraine Martins 26 Ivonne Marinho De Lima 27 Joey Merindo 28 Sally Teixeira 28 8 May 2011 The ECHO 9 Members Foyer Speaker MAY General Meeting Sonia Mattos A VERY WARM WELCOME to our New Members Sonia Mattos is Brazilian and the Director of the Preservale Institute. Preservale is a nonprofit organization which was founded in the 90s to stimulate and promote the historic and cultural potential of the historical coffee region, or "Vale do Cafe," of the State of Rio de Janeiro. Racquel Costa lives in Ipanema [email protected] The Paraiba Valley was the centre of the Brazilian coffee boom in the 19th century. The region, which is close to the city of Rio de Janeiro, is increasingly attracting tourism and many former coffee farms have been restored to their original "grandeur" to welcome tourists. Sonia is the owner of one of the most beautiful of these coffee farms, Fazenda Vista Alegre near the town of Valenca. Sonia will address sustainable tourism and its potential to strengthen the economy of the historical coffee region. Maria Heloiza Ozorio Rosa is Brazilian and lives in Flamengo with her husband Luciano. She is a teacher and enjoys literature, oil painting, music, theatre, travelling and history. Maria has lived in countries such as Italy, Egypt, Libya, Belgium, Holland, Mozambique, Argentina and Hungary. [email protected] Harris Victoria is British and lives with her husband Jonathan in Barra da Tijuca; she was a doctor but is now a full-time mom. [email protected] Tatiana Piersanti is Brazilian-French and is living in Leblon with her husband Serge and 2 children. She is a full-time mom who enjoys scrapbooking, the cinema, travelling and reading. They have lived in countries such as Egypt, France, Angola, China, UK and now Brazil. [email protected] Jane Alice Strachey is British and is living in Barra da Tijuca with her husband Damien and 2 children. She was a communications manager and is now a mom who is looking to volunteer her time with charities. [email protected] Francoise Sztajn is French and is living in Lagoa with her husband Andre and 2 kids. She is an official guide with Embratur – Brazilian Ministry of Tourism and her husband is a TV & video producer. [email protected] LIVE IN OR NEAR BARRA? Every second Friday of the month from 10:00 - 12:00 All welcome! Barra coffee morning at Saraiva Bookshop in New York City Centre, Barra Shopping. SHARE with your friends! Always wanted to share that wonderful photo you took in the Rio area; the address and details of your favourite restaurant; the interesting article you wrote, the recipe you made and your friends are raving about or any other topic that you may find interesting to share with your InC Friends? It is time you spring into action and send these to [email protected] For more info contact Clare at: [email protected] or 8275.0078 We will be very happy to give these our full attention and publish in The ECHO newsletter and the InC website. May 2011 The ECHO 10 InC Charity Committee Projeto Uerê Scholarships to private schools for children from the community Baixa do Sapateiro / Slum Complexo da Maré Francisco is thirteen years old and has two siblings. His family conditions are stable with both biological parents. They have a monthly income of 2 minimum salaries. Francisco entered the scholarship program in 2009 and his grades are good. During 2010 he only had major difficulties with geography as happens so often with children from the slum. They lack the general information and do not have the chance to travel. He is a nice and polite teenager and so far did not show any behavioral problems. In 2011 he attends the 7th year of the private school „Nossa Senhora Bonsucesso“. He has a sponsor who covers half of his scholarship. He needs a further sponsor (or a group of sponsors) covering R$ 180 per month. For additional information, please contact Mrs. Yvonne Bezerra de Mello: (21) 9998.5530 [email protected] www.projetouere.org.br Reviewing & Rating RESTAURANTS Food Décor Service Cost RESTAURANTE PRIMEIRA PÁ 9 3 7 $$ Rua Gonçcalves Crespo, 450 , Tijuca 2293.2653 Located inside the Associação Cultural Chinesa do Rio de Janeiro, and reputedly the only authentic Chinese restaurant in Rio, Premeira Pá serves extremely fresh and perfectly prepared Chinese dishes in a very casual, family-oriented atmosphere. The Peking duck is some of the best I've ever had (note that this would add another $ to the price). And they have Tsingtao beer for R$6! Review by Mary Pinner BIRA DE GUARATIBA Estrada da Vendinha, 68 A, Barra de Guaratiba 2240.2573 9 9 8 $$ We had the most amazing moceca at Bira de Guaratiba Restaurant. Founded in 1992 by fisherman Bira, the restaurant follows the regional tradition of seafood based dishes. The dishes prepared in clay pots arrive to the table still bubbling. The portions serve two people and come with white rice and palm flavoured manioc flour. Delicacies such as seafood stew; in addition to shrimp with cassava and coconut milk or the delicious sea bass fillet with shrimp rice, delight the seafood lovers. Review by Marinda Gerber May 2011 The ECHO 11 Art Meets Nature in Brumadinho If Willy Wonka were a collector of contemporary art rather than a candy man, his factory might look something like Inhotim, a 3,000-acre art park and museum in Brumadinho, a small town near Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Inhotim is the brainchild of Bernardo Paz, a 60-year-old Brazilian pig-iron magnate, whose initially moderate interest in contemporary art eventually became an all-consuming passion. Employing the help of a curatorial team that included American Allan Schwartzman, German Jochen Volz, and Brazilian Rodrigo Moura, Paz bought work from Doug Aitken, Chris Burden, Matthew Barney, Pipilotti Rist, Doris Salcedo, Cildo Miereles, among many others. By 2005 he had amassed a collection so vast he felt compelled to create a public museum for it. Jorge Macchi’s Piscina | Photo: Pedro Motta It’s a museum with a difference. Much the same way Wonka’s trees sprout lollipops and mushrooms spurt whipped cream, so do Inhotim’s footpaths, lakes, and VW Bugs burst with color. The botanical gardens that surround the galleries, pavilions, and sites were designed under the guidance of legendary Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle-Marx. The granite stone that looks like a perfect perch from which to contemplate the ornamental, black swan -inhabited lake is in fact one of many outdoor sculptures by Brazilian artist Helio Oiticica. The functioning swimming pool — a refreshing respite from the sweltering heat — is actually an art piece. Inhotim induces a wondrous, trance-like state, and given its 500+ works by more than 100 different artists, requires at least a day to be seen in full. One of the highlights is Chris Burden’s Beam Drop. Set on a hilltop looking out on distant mountains, it resembles a gargantuan game of Pik-Up Stiks. Burden scavenged 71 steel beams from scrap yards throughout Brazil, hoisted them up on a massive crane, and dropped them into a trough of wet cement. The resulting structure — a collaboration between Burden and gravity — is both gritty and graceful, urban and pastoral. Another supersized work is Matthew Barney’s De Lama Lâmina. Set inside a pair of mirrored geodesic domes, a hulking, mud-caked tractor clutches a massive, lily-white resin tree in its metal jaws. Is the piece about man’s filthy hands forever meddling with nature? Possibly. whatever the case, the mirrors do have the effect of embedding the viewer in the scene, thus suggesting complicity. But the most Wonka-ish piece of all is Doug Aitken’s Sound Pavilion. Enclosed in a round, modernist pavilion, a borehole is dug more than 600-feet into the earth. At the bottom, highly-sensitive microphones amplify whatever sounds to the surface. Sometimes it’s a faint murmur, others a bellicose grumble. The planet’s bowels, we come to realize, are not terribly unlike our own. Matthew Barney’s De Lama Lâmina | Photo: Pedro Motta Doug Aitken’s Sound Pavilion | Photo: Pedro Motta May 2011 The ECHO 12 Rio de Janeiro: a French Obsession (Continued from page 6) Now enters the resolute René Duguay-Trouin. He was a native of the port of SaintMalo in Normandy where his family owned a shipping business. This walled city is fabled for having been the breeding ground of generations of French pirates and privateers. Museums to their glory draw visitors, and a statue to Duguay-Trouin graces one of the city’s squares. As a seasoned privateer, Duguay-Trouin was an expert in the art of ransacking, and he had many naval victories under his belt. René Duguay-Trouin On 21 September 1711, commanding a twelve ship strong fleet, he appeared in front of Rio. His fleet had entered the Bay of Guanabara with divine help, hidden by a thick fog. In an eleven day battle, his two thousand and six hundred men defeated a stronger Portuguese garrison. After capturing the hapless governor and his men, and freeing the prisoners, the sack of Rio started in earnest. It lasted for two months. The terrified population abandoned its houses and fled to the forest. On November 13, Duguay-Trouin was ready to leave with an impressive but diverse bounty; it included tons of sugar, two hundred heads of cattle, piles of money, bags of gold, church artifacts, and £4 million worth of African slaves. The slaves were promptly sold in Cayenne, the ramshackle capital of French Guyana. The ships were so heavily loaded with loot that a couple of them sank during the journey back to Saint-Malo. Rio was left reeling, but France had restored its reputation as a nation of dare devil corsairs. The king rewarded Duguay-Trouin with title and land. He was to continue his brilliant navy career but his extravagant and lavish lifestyle left him so destitute that on his death bed he begged the new king a pension for his widow. Duguay-Trouin’s success marked the end of French aggression towards Rio de Janeiro. Duguay-Trouin and the Sun King The next French foray took place in 1816. Not only was it peaceful but it was welcomed. In 1807, Napoleon had invaded Portugal forcing the Portuguese royal family to flee to Brazil. In 1808, Rio became the capital of the kingdom of Portugal and Brazil. It was still a backwater in great need of cultural shine. In order to correct this situation, the king invited a group of French artists to Rio. Having worked for the defeated Emperor, they were unemployed and therefore keen to accept any work opportunity, even in Brazil. A former court painter, Jean-Batiste Debret, was the most famous among the group. He became a painter of everyday life in Brazil and that of Rio in particular. (Continued on page 13) May 2011 The ECHO 13 Rio de Janeiro: a French Obsession (Continued from page 12) His sketches of street scenes, as well as his official commissions of court life, are unparalleled documents of the period. The French mission created the first national art school. During the same period, many foreigners, adventurers and naturalists were invited to visit and document Brazil. Consequently France began to be regarded as a paragon of fine art and class. This love story with French artists lasted longer than the Brazilian Empire. The young Brazilian republic called on French architects, landscape designers and sculptors to beautify and modernize its capital. Rio’s much photographed icon, the Christ on top of the Corcovado Mountain. was partly sculpted by Paul Landowsky, a Polish born French artist (1921). The statue was built in France and brought back in sections to Rio. The most recent and significant French undertaking is the Cidade da Musica (City of Music) a cultural complex situated in an urban sprawl known as Barra da Tijuca, west of Rio. The concrete eyesore is the creation of the famed architect Christian de Portzamparc. It was erected to host classical music concerts. The highly controversial building follows the tradition set by other French-inspired cultural projects such as the Rio opera house (built in 1909 and a copy of the Paris opera), namely that they are indecently over budgeted and shamefully behind schedule. Initially expected to be inaugurated in 2004, the Cidade da Musica, renamed Cidade da arte will now be inaugurated in 2012. The first French building of Rio, the Coligny fort of Villegagnon was built on an island. Coincidentally, the Cidade da Arte was also erected on an island, but on an uninviting island set in the middle of two major thoroughfares. Has the French cultural elite lost its panache? Beatrice Labonne, Rio de Janeiro, April 7, 2011 www.wikibea-carioca.blogspot.com Villegagnon Island, Guanabara Bay Cidade da Musica May 2011 The ECHO 14 InC Calendar MAY 2011 InC Activities & Events Su M Tu W Th Fr Sa Su M Tu W Th Fr Sa Su M Tu W Th Fr Sa Su M Tu W Th F Sa Su M Tu 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 3 5 12 17 20 27 NEW MEMBERS GATHERING All new members will receive a personal invitation to attend. These meetings are specifically geared towards newcomers to provide them with useful information about the InC and its activities as well as about life in Rio in an informal, casual setting. CULTURAL COFFEE Ana Paramo Lobeto & Beatrice Labonne will share their Libyan experience; see page 12 for all the details. CAFEZINHO This will be the last event at which you can purchase your tickets for Taste of Rio! Meyra Bittencourt will host this month’s Cafezinho at her home in Santa Teresa. For RSVP and route directions please contact Meyra at: 2507.5559 / 8194.3643 or email Meyra at [email protected] TOUR Life and Customs in Rio during the 19th century and the influence of the Royal Court, see page 12 for all the details. Information and sign-up with Beatrice Labonne at [email protected] TASTE OF RIO 2011 www.tasteofrio.blogspot.com Clube Federal, Alto Leblon Buy your tickets online or at any InC event scheduled before 20 May 2011 GENERAL MEETING Our monthly meeting starts at 10.30 am at the Paissandu Club, Green Room, Avenida Afrânio de Melo Franco 330, Leblon, 10.30 am. The speaker for this month’s GM is Sonia Mattos. Guest Speakers APRIL 2011 GM Pia Granjon-Lecerf & Lauriane Whittaker Lauriane is a French trained Clinical Psychologist who has recently moved to Rio. In France, she primarily worked in psychiatric units for children and teenagers, maternity wards, etc.. She has lived in Armenia for two years working for the NGO "Pain without Border". In Rio, expatriation and cross-cultural issues are Lauriane's main professional interests. Pia who is also French, started her career as a social worker for the French health service. Her experience encompasses adult psychiatry and children at risk. She also worked for the French service concerned with asylum seekers and political refugees. In North-east France, she was responsible for the national program of the French government which aims at providing immediate assistance to migrants. Since 2008, she has specialized in life coaching, addressing the specific needs of expatriated women. See www.piacoach.com. May 2011 The ECHO 15 The Lapa Steps Many tourists visit Rio de Janeiro to tick two things off their list - Christ the Redeemer and Sugar Loaf mountain. You can’t blame them for doing so but there’s much more to the city than that. The Lapa Steps, for example, are one of Rio’s lesserknown landmarks. The tiled stairway has graced the pages of everything from National Geographic to Playboy, and Bono, Edward Norton and Snoop Dogg are just a few of the celebs that have been snapped there. The colourful stairway in the equally colourful district of Lapa is the brainchild of just one man - a Chilean painter called Selaron. He fell in love with Brazil back in 1983 and a few years later, began working on the steps as a tribute to his adopted country. Originally, the 215 steps were covered in blue, green and yellow tiles – the colours of the Brazilian flag – but nowadays, Selaron keeps himself busy by constantly changing them to include contributions from more than 60 countries around the world. The quirky artist calls the stairway his "great madness" and claims he will never stop working on it until the day he dies. He can often be spotted beavering away outside his home, halfway up the steps, and is always happy to stop and say hello to passers-by. If you would like to be part of the ever-evolving piece of art, just donate a tile or two. Trying to spot your contribution on the stairway certainly makes your visit more exciting. Selarón on the Steps of Lapa Kiannaa Leighland in Rio Inspirational Informative Healing Talks & Workshops on: In May 2011 Raindrop Therapy Healing with Essential Oils Dream Analysis Chakra Balancing Personal Treatments and Special Discounts available! For full details contact Sally Teixeira: : [email protected] : 8218.0883 Advertisement The Rio Times is an English language publication dedicated to the English speaking foreign community in Rio de Janeiro and Brazil. Since March 2009 a weekly edition is published online every Wednesday at www.riotimeonline.com The publisher released its third issue of The Rio Times printed edition mid-April, currently a monthly news publication. The 5,000 copies were delivered to four and five star hotels in Copacabana and Ipanema, as well as major hostels and other locations where expats and travelers are known to frequent. The editor welcomes contributions from the community such as news tips, articles or any other feedback that maybe of interest to The Rio Times readers. Contact information is published on the Rio Times Online website. May 2011 The ECHO 16 Those Who Make It Happen Executive Board 2011 Coordinators 2011 President Cafezinhos Mary Pinner [email protected] 2484.0440 / 8272.7772 Katrin Fraenkl [email protected] First Vice President Glorisabel Thompson-Flores [email protected] 3204.0567 / 9625.6682 Second Vice President Beatrice Labonne [email protected] 2103.2752 / 8206.6454 Treasurer Giovanna Cevenini [email protected] 8181.8587 Honorary Auditor Ward Ryan [email protected] 9812.0046 Recording Secretary Kathleen Morris [email protected] 3624.2054 / 7239.0158 Membership Secretary Christa Pickering [email protected] 3203.0836 / 8195.3817 Member at Large Anna Whyte [email protected] 2422.7286 / 8158.2035 Charity Committee Brenda Edwards [email protected] 8112.5584 Communication Team [email protected] Web: Astrid Kieftenbeld 7685.0737 The Echo: Gerda van Diemen 9736.3530 InConnection: Marinda Gerber 3586.3125 / 7284.3196 Cultural Tours Beatrice Labonne (2nd VP) [email protected] 8206.6454 General Meetings Gisela Wajnberg [email protected] 2294.0931 Hospitality Renate Donnepp [email protected] 8354.9589 New Members Temporarily Vacant If you are interested in this position, please contact [email protected] Activity Coordinators 2011 Bridge Coca Caputo [email protected] 2491.7830 / 9601.7413 Children’s Activities Ewa Gozdzik-Lawlor [email protected] 2529.8303 Concert Information Margarita Mari 2256.8419 English Non-Native Speakers Francesca Ley [email protected] 3283.2801 / 8316.4484 Fun Cooking Club Lucia Helena Assad [email protected] 9982.9596 / 2434.8167 Portuguese Conversation Viviane Richardson [email protected] 2249.2900 / 9966.9494 Quilting Jacira Migueis Aun [email protected] 3283.2801 / 8316.4484 Tennis Maria Evans [email protected] 2267.6422 / 9519.1436 Travel Tips Sigrid Pernidji [email protected] 2425.6745 / 9786.4732 Baby/Toddler Playgroups Zona Sul Ewa Gozdzik-Lawlor [email protected] 2529.8303 / 8229.8888 Barra Sarah Vaughan [email protected] 3387.2181
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