A Painter and a Writer’s Creative Retreat on Lesvos

A painter and a writer met, fell in love, and then built a dream to create the Sigri Arts Retreat, each teaching the art that expresses them most and that has brought their life meaning. Here we discover their journey and what they are discovering along the way.

In search of the MuseInsights Greece - A Painter and a Writer's Creative Retreat on Lesvos

By Tomas Watson 

It started in 1994, in Astypalaia. I had been awarded an 8-month scholarship to paint in Greece after graduating from the Slade in London. I needed sun and simplicity and chose to live there through that Winter. It was beautiful, stark, remote, and very macho in those days but somehow never became my muse.

A second scholarship took me to Nisyros, powerful, volcanic, lush, and dramatic. I stayed here for 6 years. The painting that won the BP award in 1998, was based on an old, brightly- painted, Dodecanesian kitchen. Nisyros was always inspiring and always frustrating…

Next stop was Andros. Here I stayed for 16 years. Andros was an easy island to live in, it was bigger and greener, with freshwater springs everywhere, but it never quite became my muse.

In 2017 I moved to the capital. I love the energy of downtown Athens, the beauty of the ruins and old buildings, and am fortunate to be living in Plaka, a stone’s throw from my studio in Thisseio.

The search for the muse ended in 2020 when I first set eyes on Sigri in Lesvos. I knew immediately that this was the place I had been waiting for. It is at once vast and imposing and yet intimate and tiny. It is sensuous and alluring, with feminine curves formed out of masculine volcanic rock. The nearby islands create bays which reflect the changing colours of the setting sun. Here I discovered a true desire to paint the landscape

Follow Tomas Watson on Instagram @tomas.watson

Sigri, A Gem for Creativity

By Efrosini (Cindy) Camatsos

I wear different hats.  Academic scholar. Writer of fiction. Professor of literature. Manager of a boutique hotel.  Most recently: beekeeper!

I think this partly has to do with the varied settings of my childhood. My parents are both Greek, from Lesvos, but I was born and grew up in Mississippi (the subject of my second novel). Summers were spent in Lesvos. I didn’t blink as I transitioned from neatly packaged milk from the Piggly Wiggly in America, to jugs of fresh goat’s milk delivered to my grandmother’s house every morning by the local shepherd.

Creating has always been central for me. Creating books, articles, a classroom environment, a summer program, Hyphenology, which was an academic / community service / cultural immersion two-week program for teenagers.

 

It was during the program’s first year that I saw the universal appeal of Sigri. I had organised it so that we would be in the main town of Mytilene, with a long weekend in Sigri.  I thought teenagers would get bored in Sigri. What was there to do but swim and star-gaze? No bars, one kafeneio (old-style), three seaside tavernas. I was shocked when they wanted to stay longer in Sigri. The following year, I did one-week/one-week, and again, the feedback I got was that they would have preferred the whole thing to be in Sigri! The third year, I moved the entire program to Sigri, with a long weekend elsewhere. Why Sigri appealed to me as a writer was clear; but, what did teenagers find in Sigri?

I began to think about what it was that Sigri offered. People, regardless of age, nationality, or interests, are inundated (and exhausted) by cities. They crave the simple life, pared down to its bare necessities. Life without the distractions that a city conjures to keep its citizens numb. Life that is in tune with nature, where one’s energy sets with the sun and rises with the birds. Life that takes the exhaustion of the city and replaces it with self-nurture and harmony. Where one’s soul has space to breathe.

Having brought about this balance, creativity can flourish.  This is the reason I am so excited about developing the Arts Retreats here with Tomas.  I have seen the effects Sigri has on my own creativity, and more recently, his. I want to share this with others who want to tap into theirs.

Follow Sigri Arts Retreat on Instagram @sigriartsretreat

Carolina Doriti: I Can’t Help Falling in Love… With Greek Food

Carolina Doriti, chef, food stylist and food writer extraordinaire, has made a big impact on social media and beyond with her many Greek culinary talents.

Insights Greece - Carolina Doriti: I Can’t Help Falling in Love... With Greek Food

As soon as she could read, Carolina’s mother gave her a recipe book that sent her cooking fantasies rocketing; concepts both simple and complex, profoundly cultural and edgily independent, that have formed her art and presence today. Growing up in Athens in a home where the kitchen was always alive with action, in a family that was directly involved with food, she started writing her own recipes at the age of 12. She studied Media and Cultural Studies and then an MA on Arts Administration Cultural Policy and Curating in the UK, starting her career as a curator at notable museums before returning to her native Athens in 2004.

“I’ve always liked the idea of being strong and independent and dedicated and productive; so I always worked hard! In 2005 I decided to quit my job and turned my hobby into my work. I started cooking professionally, and that’s when my work became my life,” she says. Although she was still in her 20s, she put parties and play aside to dedicate herself to cooking.

In 2013 she gave birth to her son Apollo, which led to a lifestyle change and a new collaboration with Culinary Backstreets, a company that runs gastronomy tours and has a successful web presence showcasing global cuisine. It was then that Carolina started writing about Greek food and gastronomy.

“The more I discovered, the more passion was awakened. I wanted to do the best I could to Insights Greece - Carolina Doriti: I Can’t Help Falling in Love... With Greek Foodlet the world know about Greek food traditions and recipes that were almost lost in time. Also, the products of Greece are such a treasure. I feel so grateful to be in a country that is so “rich” in products, with so much history behind them!” she says.

Her work as a food writer soon led to other avenues. “I started collaborating with magazines by writing recipes, food styling, writing reviews on chefs … an experience that has helped me view this profession from every angle.”

In 2016 Carolina began working for Greek American chef and food writer Diana Kochilas, with whom she collaborates on the show ‘My Greek Table’ as a Culinary producer. This proved to be an invaluable experience: “This gave me the opportunity to travel around Greece and learn so much more. I spent time with shepherds in Epirus, milked goats and tasted raw, fresh milk thistle from the fields, learned how to make different types of cheese, baked rusks on Cretan mountains, learned from Mrs Margarita making the best tomato fritters in Santorini with the authentic native seeds she’s preserved (now I also own some too), collected honey with beekeepers in Ikaria, learned about Greek wines from some of the best producers, and much more. This made me love Greece even more, I am one of Greece’s biggest honest fans,” Carolina says.

Insights Greece - Carolina Doriti: I Can’t Help Falling in Love... With Greek Food

Her experiences were rewarding in her role as a mother too. “The biggest challenge in this work is being a single mom at the same time. When people ask me how I do it I honestly don’t know. But I manage. And I can proudly admit that my seven-year-old Apollo is a real food connoisseur!”

For three years, Carolina has been working on a few projects where she can share her knowledge and experiences that she has gathered throughout the years – the discovery of Greece’s cuisine from multifaceted perspectives. “I love the way they grow vines in Santorini; it’s fascinating to learn about how these vines are not actually water, that they’ve been grown in that shape for centuries to protect them from the microclimate. I love Greek saffron. Greece is so rich in mushrooms that Greeks don’t even know much about. I am also a huge fan of Mastiha and have written a lot about it, having cherished the experience of collecting it. I love a ‘Kariki’ cheese from Tinos – it’s a type of blue cheese that’s not actually blue and matures in a gourd. Above all, I love how from one humble ingredient you can create dozens of creative recipes.”

Carolina keeps herself involved in the food scene in various ways, such as through her collaboration with WISE Greece, an NGO that supports Greek food producers, and recently also started the Culinary Backstreets Athens Wine Club. She is also currently working on writing her own book, while also being near to completing another book she’s been writing with a friend.

One of Carolina’s greatest aspirations is to evoke in those who follow her work “the love, passion, appreciation, and excitement I share for food and cooking, in a simple and humble way. I hope to educate them the way I am trying to educate myself!”

Insights Greece - Carolina Doriti: I Can’t Help Falling in Love... With Greek Food

Greeks are slowly but surely discovering more and more about their complex, sophisticated, multiculturally-influenced, and deeply historical culinary heritage, but there is still a way to go, Carolina says. As for how foreigners connect with Greek cuisine, she says “I believe most Greek restaurants abroad fail to represent the real Greek gastronomy. Of course, this has been improving a lot during the recent years but still… there are so many clichés that need to be overcome. Greek cuisine goes far beyond moussaka, souvlaki, Greek salad, and baklava! That’s how for decades this country had been marketing it’s gastronomy, often leaving visitors with the impression that Greek food is greasy and fried and heavy. I mean come on!”

Follow Carolina on Instagram: @carolina_doriti