Acciaroli is a tiny fishing village in Southern Italy: it has a nice harbour, sheltered by an ancient Norman tower.
Everything in Acciaroli is related to the sea, even the church is directly above the water and protects all the seamen passing by.
Once, before the construction of the new harbour, the houses were built directly on the rocks at the edge of the sea, and were linked with the mainland by small wooden walkways: it was easier for the inhabitants to get on a boat then to go walking!
Just behind these disappeared houses, were other buildings: old stone architecture that has survived the harbour’s renovation. Nowadays they are the oldest houses of Acciaroli. There are small turrets hanging from the walls, with tiny slits; they have no defensive functions, they are just toilets, added years after the construction of the building.
All these old houses have beautiful doors. They are made of wood, often painted in bright colors, sometimes they have nice knockers and knobs. But the wood is peeling, scratched; decay is everywhere, helped by the effect of the salty air, by the years passing by and by the shortness of money of the owners.
I have photographed the most beautiful of these doors for my personal pleasure and also in order to keep track of a disappearing heritage: these old houses are slowly losing their original character, sometimes they are simply disappearing: Acciaroli doesn’t count anymore on fishing for surviving, but on tourism. And the houses are refurbished to meet the tourists needs: they add comforts and loose charm.
In few years probably these doors won’t be here anymore.
Someone says that Ernest Hemingway, the great American writer, spent some days in Acciaroli in the late ‘40s of last century; someone says also that he and got in Acciaroli his earliest inspiration for his novel The Old Man and the Sea. Well, someone says, no living witnesses remain and the story has the shape of a legend.
But I like to think of Mr. Hemingway on the terrace of what was once the only hotel in Acciaroli (and today is closed), trying to order a Martini cocktail and being told that there was available only red, strong wine. And figs.
Some of the most beautiful doors of Acciaroli are nearby the entrance of the hotel. One morning, just after sunrise, while I was photographing them, I thought that maybe one of those knobs was touched by the hand of one of the greatest writers of the 20th century!
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great!
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Thank you!
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Beautiful, and inspiring, I love all the textures. Your doors are a thing of beauty. Thank you for sharing with us.
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Thank you very much, Christine Scannell, for your kind words!
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Excellent photographs. The view of the harbor is superb. Keep up the good work.
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