HOMER


Design and Fine Arts Gallery/ Retail Environment.


The interior designer Richard Mishaan is reintroducing Homer, the stylish shop he owned from 1997 to 2008.The mix includes contemporary and vintage furnishings, as well as Mr. Mishaan's own, more-affordable furniture designs for Bolier and lighting for Urban Electric. Mishann intends for the store to enable customers to create world class collections as he has done for many of his private clients.


A close encounter with a man-eating giant. A sorceress who turns men into pigs. A long-lost king taking back his throne. On their own, any of these make great stories. But each is just one episode in the Odyssey. A 12,000-line poem spanning years of ancient Greek history, myth, and legend. How do we make sense of such a massive text that comes from and tells of a world so far away? The fact that we can read the Odyssey at all is pretty incredible, as it was composed before the Greek alphabet appeared in the 8th century BCE. It was made for listeners rather than readers, and was performed by oral poets called rapsodes. Tradition identifies its author as a blind man named Homer, but no one definitively knows whether he was real or legendary. The earliest mentions of him occur centuries after his era, and the poems attributed to him seem to have been changed and rearranged many times by multiple authors before finally being written down in their current form. In fact, the word rapsode means stitching together as these poets combined existing stories, jokes, myths, and songs into a single narrative. To recite these massive epics live, rapsodes employed a steady meter, along with mnemonic devices These included descriptions of scenery and lists of characters and helped the rapsode keep their place in the narrative, just as the chorus or bridge of a song helps us to remember the next verses. Because most of the tales were familiar to the audience, it was common to hear the sections of the poem out of order. At some point, the order became set in stone and the story was locked into place as the one we read today. But since the world has changed a bit in the last several thousand years, it helps to have some background before j The Odyssey itself is a sequel to Homer's other famous epic, The Iliad, which tells the story of the Trojan War. If there's one major theme uniting both poems, it's this. Do not, under any circ The Greek pantheon is a dangerous mix of divine power and h And many of the problems faced by h The desire to please the gods was so great that the ancient Greeks traditionally welcomed all strangers into their homes with generosity for fear that the strangers might be gods in disguise. This ancient code of hospitality was called Zenia. It involved hosts providing their guests with safety, food and comfort, and the guests returning the favor with courtesy and gifts if they had them. Zenia has a significant role in the Odyssey, where Odysseus and his wanderings is the perpetual guest, while in his absence, his clever wife Penelope plays non-stop host. The Odyssey recounts all of Odysseus' years of travel, but the narrative begins in medias rays, in the middle of things. Ten years after the Trojan War, we find our hero trapped on an island, still far from his native Ithaca and the family he hasn't seen for twenty years. Because he's angered the sea god Poseidon by blinding his son, a Cyclops, Odysseus' passage home has been fraught with mishap after mishap. With trouble brewing at home and gods discussing his fate, Odysseus begins the account of those missing years to his hosts. One of the most fascinating things about the Odyssey is the gap between how little we know about its time period and the wealth of detail the text itself contains. Historians, linguists and archaeologists have spent centuries searching for the ruins of Troy and identifying which islands Odysseus visited. Just

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Mon 10:00 AM - 06:00 PM
Tue 10:00 AM - 06:00 PM
Wed 10:00 AM - 06:00 PM
Thu 10:00 AM - 06:00 PM
Fri 10:00 AM - 06:00 PM
Sat 11:00 AM - 07:00 PM

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