6/01/2010

Empty beaches and great deals in Greece

Empty beaches and great deals in Greece
Bookings to Greece are down thanks to this month's riots and strikes, but that means you could pick up a bargain this summer. Gemma Bowes reports from a blissfully quiet Kefalonia.


Gemma Bowes
The Guardian, Saturday 29 May 2010

Oh, so quiet ... Myrtos Beach, Kefalonia, Greece

The little fishing harbour of Fiscardo, in the north of Kefalonia, is often described in guidebooks as Greece's prettiest village. The Venetian houses that line its waterfront are painted in sugary shades with contrasting doors and windows – blush-rose and green, lilac and pink, orange and red – all lit up like a twinkling rainbow at night. They form an enchanting, if slightly twee, setting, where holidaying couples and yachties potter from taverna to taverna to ponder whose bream might be freshest, which rabbit stifado the more traditional. A 30-minute drive south, beyond the equally pretty Assos, is the incredible curve of perfect white sand, leaking into water the bright turquoise of antifreeze, of Myrtos beach, one of Greece's most photographed.

These treasures, along with the Ionian island's legacy as the setting for Captain Corelli's Mandolin, have made Kefalonia one of Greece's most popular holiday islands. And yet, when I visited the week before last, it seemed rather empty.

This has been a dire month for Greece's tourism industry. The riots in Athens at the start of May, strike action affecting ferries, flights and goods transportation, financial meltdown, and then, to top it off, the ash clouds interrupting flights . . . all that was missing was an outbreak of bird flu to see off the country's image as a safe, easy holiday destination.

The sum effect caused one Fiscardo barman to conclude "this summer, there will be no summer" as he served our mojitos in an empty bar.

Volcanic ash had prevented the Manchester flight bringing in that week's northern tourists, and the weather was a bit iffy, but according to Tassos, the owner of our villa, Trizoni, Kefalonia's holiday villa owners were seriously worried about the coming season, and struggling to fill their properties.

Around 27,000 hotel nights were cancelled in the Athens area in the three weeks following the riots at the start of May, and many tour operators reported a nosedive in bookings – Thomas Cook said its were down 24% on last year; Olympic Holidays, the UK's biggest Greece specialist, said June bookings were down, though the World Cup was also a factor. "We undoubtedly saw a slowdown in bookings to Greece," said Chris Lorenzo, managing director of Seafarer, a Greek sailing specialist, "but media coverage has grossly exaggerated the riots and other problems, which has turned people away."

5/30/2010

Museum of Cycladic Art

Museum of Cycladic Art

It all began in the 1960s, when Nicholas and Dolly Goulandris began to collect ancient artefacts and Cycladic figurines. As time went on, the collection increased in size and travelled to important museums all over the world. The Museum of Cycladic Art opened its doors to the public in January 1986.

Today, over 3,000 artefacts of Cycladic, Ancient Greek and Cypriot art are on display on four floors, in the galleries of the Museum, a living cultural space in the heart of Athens. One of the Museum wings that hosts temporary exhibitions is the Stathatos Mansion (1 Irodotou & Vas. Sofias Ave), one of the best examples of neoclassical architecture in Athens, work of the Bavarian architect Ernest Ziller. A glass-covered passage connects Stathatos Mansion to the Permanent Collections building at 4 Neophytou Douka Str.
Cycladic Art Collection

The Museum’s Collection of Cycladic Art, one of the most important in the world, is a pole of attraction for young and old alike. The austere marble figurines depicting nude figures of humans enchant visitors with their simplicity and abstraction – features that have, indeed, inspired 20th-century artists such as Brancusi, Modigliani, Giacometti, Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore and others.
Ancient Greek Art Collection
A synthetic approach to the history of the Aegean societies from 2.000 BC to the 4th c. AD. With the aid of about 350 exhibits and interactive applications, visitors can follow the most important social and political developments from the birth of ancient Greek civilisation down to its creative blending with the Roman tradition, as reflected in constant changes in art and ideology. Part of the exhibition is devoted to ancient Greek technology.
Th. Zintilis Collection of Cypriot Antiquities
The Thanos N. Zintilis Collection of Cypriot Antiquities, one of the most important private collections of Cypriot antiquities in the world, includes about 400 artefacts made of stone, clay, bronze, silver, gold, glass, and faience are on display, representing a broad spectrum of Cypriot civilisation from the Chalcolithic period (4th millennium BC) down to Early Byzantine times (6th c. AD).
Scenes from daily life in Antiquity
From the Ancient Greek Art collections of the Museum, 150 objects (vases, figurines and weapons) are presented, grouped by theme: Gods and Heroes, Eros, the World of Women, the World of Men, and the Underworld. The permanent display is accompanied by two audiovisual presentations on everyday life and burial customs in ancient times.

Opening hours

Monday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 10:00 – 17:00
Thursday: 10:00 – 20:00
Sunday: 11.00 – 17.00
Tuesday: closed

Tickets
Admission: 7 euros
Monday admission: 3,50 euros
People aged 19-26: 2,50 euros
People aged over 65, university students: 3,50 euros
Group ticket (over 15 people): 5 euros

Access
Metro: Evangelismos (line 3), Syntagma (lines 2, 3)
Bus: A5, E6, E7, X14, 054, 200, 203, 204, 220, 221, 224, 235, 408, 608, 622, 732, 825 (Rigillis stop)
Trolley: 3, 7, 14 (Rigillis stop)

Museum of Cycladic Art
4 Neophytou Douka Str. /
1 Irodotou & Vas. Sofias Ave.
106 74 Athens
Τ. 210 7228321-3
F. 210 7239382