Finding Art + Flea Markets + Argentina
Finding Art + Flea Markets + Argentina
Finding Art + Flea Markets + Argentina .........The secrets of Finding Art at Flea Markets in and around Buenos Aires. The Magnificent San Telmo Market San Telmo is the center of the most ancient area of the city of Buenos Aires. With only 25 square blocks, this small district concentrates in itself a bit of every thing this city has to offer to locals and visitors. The Plaza Dorrego is the meeting point and from where we start our journey. Every day is a good day to visit San Telmo… but on Sundays it's just something else. The narrow stone paved streets are no longer busy with traffic, for on Sundays they are walking streets only, were one can find lovely couples passing by, kids playing, young and older people enjoying their free day, foreign visitors buying handcrafted items, antiques, collectibles, having coffee on a sweet little coffee house that has put its tables on the street because of the beautiful day. As we approach the Plaza, in between human statues, two tangueros are posing for photograph and a puppeteer, taking advantage of a melancholic tango song, puts on an improvised play of very high artistic quality. As we keep on walking we can appreciate the crowd around the Plaza Dorrego, were the antiques' market takes place every Sunday. As we enter this outdoor market, the options are more than plenty, some interesting places catch my eye: some wild magazine collections from the 30s, beautiful ancient phonographs that still work are playing one of Gardel's most beautiful tangos. Really close to that stand, I view, astonished, the perfect image of the Argentine's 60s: two posters, side by side, like twin brothers: El Che Guevara and the four legendary Beatles. On the street many talented artists play a tango, a milonga, and the folkloric chamamé; the sound track of this beautiful spectacle. As the sun goes down and the market begins to close, we appreciate the care and love with which the artisans and antiquarians put away each item that was exhibited during this sunny afternoon. What an amazing spectacle of history, home of the immigrants who long ago came to this land to build a nation. s we walk away, we pass by a traditional Bistro locally known as bodegón, we can appreciate that the fire ‘s already burning, and its coals are heating the grill for an outstanding asado; without thinking it twice we walk in to finish this day in the best possible Argentinean way, asado and an excellent red wine from Mendoza. Invest in all that Argentina has to offer from Museum quality Art to Fashion from Antiques to Real Estate, and enjoy living with Arts and Antiques and Travelling all Argentina, Chile or Uruguay for them ....... read all about it here: www.frassinetti.com Phone: +54 911 6965 1955 or in B's A's: 15 6965 1955 Chat any time, Bob Frassinetti
art found at Flea Markets
art found at Flea Markets 
 
Buenos Aires city has become very famous because of it's intense cultural life since the beginning of the t wentieth century. On the centennial of the city's foundation, Buenos Aires scene was restored and modernized, making of this amazing metropolis one of Latin America's most important cities, also worldly famous often compared to Paris and many other mayor European cities. But it was specially during the 1960s when the Latin American cultural boom had a very strong impact world wide. Back then, Buenos Aires was the epicenter from where that trend expanded. Nouveau cultural and Art movements handed hand with the birth of many of the most important and prestigious Latin American intellectuals of all times. As all of them spread out and multiply, almost every Porteñan coffe house –barcitos- sheltered deep and outstanding art, philosophy and politics discussions. Young and not so young people gathered together at each corner of the city; they debated on their future as citizens, what to do with the world, discussed the cultural movement of the time… All this seemed unlimited! Hundred of cultural centers, bohemian bars filled this populous city, offering spaces for social and cultural debate. Everyone participated, not just porteños or Argentineans, but many Latin Americans who saw BA as the converging point of all these movements. Even many important European intellectuals came to Buenos Aires when seeking to debate their ideas as well as to share their thoughts and matters. Just to make my point on what was Buenos Aires during the 60s: At that time, more than fifty cultural magazines were published bimonthly or every three months, printing more from 500 to 10,000 copies each of them. Many groups of intellectuals used those magazines to show their thoughts and debate with the people. The content of them all expressed many diverse cultural and political ideas such as: Marxists, liberals, right wing peronists, left wing peronists, existentialists, Maoists, beats, artistic vanguard... each had their group, reunion place as well as their magazine, accessed by a large potion of society. Because of this, within this movement of society, as a product of this social interest the Di Tella Institute was born, one of the most important cultural centers of Argentina's history. This was the mark of an era. It was very popular among youngsters, like a two way street of mutual influence. It was by 1958 when, both, the Di Tella Institute and the foundation with the same name opened, but the golden years, locally and wold wide, where to become a few years latter. The Vanguard art shown there draw the crowds to its doors. They held exhibits of more than 150,000 people. We can say that the Di Tella Inst. Esthetically represented those “ideas rupturistas” (breakthrough) that were dominant among the people in general, and the intellectuals in particular. However, they were quite pluralists, so vigorous detractors had a place there too. The esthetic shown at the Di Tella was the most successful attempt in the country, of bounding art with life, central vanguard art concept-idea. At the peak of the Di Tella Institute, one and a half million dollars were donated by private corporations. They also had a public office on Florida peatonal street (one of the most important streets in Buenos Aires)and thousands of daily regular visitors. The institute was named after one of Argentina's most prestigious businessman, who had past away ten years before its opening. It were his children, who decided to exhibit their father's lifetime art collection; they also were the ones who contacted the artists who would latter fill other showrooms with their new concepts and ideas, local as well as foreign. Onganía's dictatorship censured most of the Institute's activities furthering and fastening the Di Tella Institute's end in the early 70s. Worldly famous artists and intellectuals such as Umberto Eco, Romero Brest, Marta Minujín, Nacha Guevara, Les Luthiers, Toulouse-Lautrec y Artaud among others gave birth to this one wonderfull and brief dream. After the terrible military dictatorship during the 1970s, whose objective of killing any internal debate, including the ones in the cultural space, was achieved with much success. Therefore the result of that, was the idea of one possible way of thinking reality. This was achieved with repression as well as with fear induced to the population, as almost every artistic space was forced to shut down. By the early 80s we returned to a very wounded democracy, that non the less created a much propitious context for a new cultural birth of Argentina. Today, after many, many years, Argentina is returning to an improved cultural life, new cultural centers are coming to life daily, art museums, the rebirth of those once famous Porteñan cafes, bands of street musicians, the growth of artisans fairs as well as markets for collectors, the daily artistic street shows, as well as many more that are being held in theatres of Buenos Aires. All this is putting this city, once more in a central place within Latin American culture. Every Barrio –neighborhood- is coming back to life, showing in every corner some cultural ambiance… even on the train, when traveling back and forth from work, passengers enjoy great folk music played by street musicians. All this, plus this city's amazing architecture, blending the chick modern areas as Puerto Madero and Recoleta with the colonial Monserrat and San Telmo, adding some of the bohemian style of Palermo Viejo and the lights of Microcentro (downtown BA and the most famous Corrientes Av which was renamed as the Bookstore Av.) make of Buenos Aires a place one must visit at least once in a lifetime! Go back to Art Dealer´s Homepage Idea by Artdealer. Editor: Florencia Rodríguez info@artdealer.com.ar