Stencils from around Ankara and Beytepe.
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
wallacepolsom
occasionally subtle
Not today Justin

Janaina Medeiros
Misplaced Lens Cap

if i look back, i am lost
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
noise dept.

sheepfilms

JBB: An Artblog!
art blog(derogatory)

Kiana Khansmith
Cosimo Galluzzi
Three Goblin Art

izzy's playlists!
Jules of Nature

Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

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@beatsoffeet
Stencils from around Ankara and Beytepe.

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One of my Favorite sculptures on Beytepe's campus
Final Turkish hooray: gastro tour of Kızılay No beter way to say goodbye to a place than to eat and drink yourself sick In an Afternoon. Besides numerous beers, some the Beat things I ate yesterday were Breakfast- çarşada and çay Lunch- İskender Later lunch- çiğ köfte (a heavily seasoned wheat paste. Arguably my favorite Turkish street food) Early dinner- et döner
Heading home
This blog is not caught up with everything I have done. However, tonight I begin my trip home. I have more post though and lots to say about my time here in Turkey as a whole. Maybe in my more than 20 hours of traveling time I can get all of those thoughts together
My humble abode while living here. Quite a spectacular view though.

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Interior of Hagia Sophia
12th century mosaic of Christ in Hagia Sophia
Photos around Taksim and Gezi park. Like I mentioned in my previous post, the police presence was staggering. Making the tension thick in the square. Cops formed perimeters around the republic monument and Gezi park while they stood guard around around a massive Iftar taking place in the square (photo with all the people at tables). Photographers were everywhere, many of whom were equipped with military grade gas masks.
An evening on Galata Bridge After fleeing Taksim, Katie and I went to Galata bridge to play backgammon and have some drinks. The Galata bridge spans the Golden Horn and beneath the road on the upper level Cafes and bars line the water. I also enjoyed a hookah and beat Katie quite handedly at a match of backgammon (sorry Katie). A guy came along who was very good at the accordion. Unfortunately waiters seem adamant about running him off. Istanbul is exceptionally beautiful at night. On the far side of the bridge, Yeni Camii stood brightly illuminated and reflecting in the rippling water. Between the minarets of Yeni Camii stings of lights spell out "Din hayatin Anlamidir" which as best I can translate means something like "religion, the meaning of life." Also on the far side were the "Balik Elmek" (fish sandwich) boats with their neon rope lights shimmering in the water with Suleymanlye Cami glowing on the hill behind them.
This is Mustafa. He has been my second roommate here in Turkey. He goes to school in Istanbul but came to Hacettepe for a project he is doing over the summer in automotive engineering. Mustafa is fasting for Ramadan so I've been joining him in the evening for Iftar at the cafeteria. It really is an incredible display of will and devotion that he and millions of others are able to fast from sun up to sun down for thirty days. Yesterday I fasted because we had been invited to Iftar off campus so I wanted the complete experience. I was able to last the whole day but the hunger and thirst was so relentless it put me into a grumpy daze. You can't complain about it though because so many are in just the same boat. That first sip of water I had after more than 12 hours was perhaps the greatest sip of water I have ever had. Fasting quickly taught me to not take being able to eat for granted and made me think about millions how have no choice but to go hungry everyday. One day was extremely difficult but I can't imagine it everyday for thirty days. Since Mustafa goes to school in Istanbul I had to ask him about his experience during the height of the protests. I told him that I didn't believe Americans would be likely do such a thing as we usually just go online to complain about our government. However, much to my delight he said that he had the exact same sentiment about Turkish youth prior to the protests as well.

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Istanbul Street art
Not quite Chapuling pt. 2- To Taksim we go
After checking into our Hostel, Katie and I caught an hour of shut eye and decided that we wanted to see Taksim Square and Gezi park. The center of modern day Istanbul and the epicenter of the protests from earlier this summer. We heard that things had simmered way day there, however, this did not exactly turn out to be the case.
We emerged from the subway to find the entrance surrounded by police wearing body armor and carrying riot shields, butons, and guns. The area was filled with people but the massive police presence was unnerving. Perimeters of cops surrounded the Republic Monument which sits at the center of Taksim and around near by Gezi Park foreboding anyone to enter these areas with the unspoken threat of forceful retaliation. The tension was tangible in the air.
A massive crowd was seated in the area of the square that is adjacent to Gezi park. Given the time, just before sundown, it was obvious that this crowd was gathered for Iftar (the meal to break fast). Cops also surrounded this crowd which I found curious. While cops were keeping people out of two areas they formed protective barriers around another crowd. The area is testy if not dangerous, which makes we wonder why a religious dinner would be planned there. It seems to me that the current government continues to mishandle this situation. Such actions as these seem to be further provoking protesters, but maybe this is just my naive outsider perspective.
We heard some commotion coming from the crowd that stood just outside of Gezi park so we decided to look for a place to eat on the other side of the square. On the way we past a massive line of cops which I took a video of and have included in this post. Heavily armed and idle, the swarm of cops watched the square and the swirling crowd around it.
We found a lovely little kebap place in a narrow street. We sat at a table in the alley, enjoyed our food and discussed the scene we had just come from. A crowd steadily walked through the narrow street. Many of the people we saw carried surgical masks, had bandannas hanging from their neck, or had military grade gas masks resting on top of their head all prepared for the ever present threat of a tear gas assault.
As we had just received our tea after the meal, the crowd moving through the alley suddenly swelled and quickened, their tear gas-thwarting gear now dawned. Those without anything to protect themselves from the noxious gas pulled their shirts to their face. My eyes began to burn and itch. A scratch sensation quickly clawed its way into my throat. Sneezing and coughing echoed off the tall fronts of the buildings that lined the alley. Children that sat at a near by table began to whine and cry. It is incredible how potent tear gas is. We had not even seen it being deployed but we were got a strong dose of it. This of course alarmed us.
We quickly paid and joined the masses moving away from Taksim. However, as we reached the end of the alley where it met another alley perpendicularly we were surprised to discover a massive crowd to left chanting the familiar chants of the protests. We immediately turned around to retrace our steps. We heard the stamping of dozens of feet as the crowd had suddenly begun run toward our direction. We ducked inside of a near by bar as the crowd moved passed. I truly became frightened at this point, unsure how many cops were moving up the alley towards us and what sort of force they would not hesitate to use on anyone that seemed like a protester. However, we never saw any cops out the window of the bar in which we were seeking refuge.
Katie took out her lonely planet book to make it apparent that we were tourists, not involved in these demonstrations and we hustled to the metro station from which we came. We didn't run but we did walk with frantic urgency. Thankfully this walk out was unimpeded by neither protesters nor cops. I was struck by two things, 1) that things actually seemed calmer in Taksim than in our near by alley and 2) people remained calmly seated at cafes nonchalantly brushing tears from the irritating gas out the their eyes. They seem quite resigned the events that were taking place around them.
We stopped to neither watch nor take pictures. We raced down the stairs of the metro station and hopped on a train which took us to a much more docile rest of the evening.
The maiden tower First built in the 12 century. The Maiden's Tower stands on a small islet where the Marmara Sea meets the Bosphorus Straight. The legend of this structure is that there was once as prophecy told to a sultan that his daughter would be killed by a venomous snake on her 18th birthday. He had the Maiden's Tower built so that she could live where there were no snakes. Her 18th birthday came and she asked for some exotic fruits. A basket of fruit was brought to her. Within this basket was an asp, a tiny poisonous snake. It bit her and she died in her fathers arms. "Fate is a fickle bitch." - Ben Linus (lost)
We arrived in Istanbul around 4 in the morning. We were fortunate enough to find a hotel with some very nice gentlemen working the graveyard shift who allowed us to get a little shut eye in the lobby while we waited on the Metro to start running. The hotel which was situated in the bus station was pretty nice but also peculiar. It had a 2D six foot tall chrome unicorn that was back lit by a glowing orange light.
Our first stop was the grand bazaar which is what is featured here in this video. It was built in 1455 and is one of the largest covered bazaars on earth with 61 streets and more than 3000 shops. The place is a maze but every new street provides something fascinating to see. We were there just as it opened and it was very interesting to see the place come alive. The streets transformed with each passing minute as shops opened and market-goers flocked. The grand bazaar attracts the better part of a half million visitors each day.
We've been to some fairly gritty markets while we have been here in Turkey; these are my favorite because I love to get a glimpse into the reality of life here in Turkey and because these markets usually have great prices. The true sign we have noticed of a bazaar that is used by locals is panties, copious amounts of panties. panties hanging from ceilings and spread out over dozens of square feet of table space. There aren't many panties to be seen at the grand bazaar which seemed to be much more geared to foreigners not looking to by the necessities of everyday life.
We also visited the spice bazaar which we visited on our previous visit to Istanbul. The place smells wonderful and is very close to the grand bazaar. A common item seen is "natural viagra tea." One hears some interesting sales pitches for natural viagra tea when strolling through the bazaar and I couldn't resist asking one of the merchants selling it about the contents of the enhancing tea. You can hear this inquiry in the video.
Mannequins in Turkey are hilarious. I was pretty delirious and had fun all morning with them.
Interior of Sultanahmet (the blue mosque). This was from my first trip to Istanbul. The Colors inside took my breath away. You can get a feel for how big this mosque is by the picture of the two boys leaning against one of the 4 enormous columns.

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Katie and I took a trip back to Istanbul this weekend in order to spend more time in the city than we did on first trip which only lasted one day. My next few (or 10) posts will cover this trip. We arrived around 4 AM. We were exhausted and fortunately some nice guys in a hotel at the Istanbul bus station let us sleep in the lobby until the subway started running. What one often reads about Istanbul is that it's an extremely unique of mix of the old and new. This is absolutely the truth. It is a little difficult for me to articulate the exact feeling but it is a powerful feeling. Old and new; traditional and contemporary; conventional and experimental; It all collides in this massive metropolis. The picture here illustrates this feeling in this city better than my words can. An old mosque (not sure what its name is or when it was built) and a light rail train just a few meters apart.
Cool statue at a park Sıhhiye, Ankara