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The Maltese Crossroads:
A Study in Gold and Blue
By
Stephanie Fletcher
A
waiter at a restaurant in the Maltese capital city of Valetta served our
after dinner coffee, then placed two small white plates of halvah at
either end of the long table. Over a period of five days I had become
addicted to the rich Turkish confection made of ground sesame seeds, and
nuts and honey. The grainy, fudge-like candy made the perfect
accompaniment for a cup of strong aromatic espresso.
“That’s it!” I cried, pointing to the coarsely chopped chunks of tan
candy. “’Halvah’ is one of those colors we’ve been searching
for.”
Penelope, a travel companion, enthusiastically agreed. She and I had spent
several days attempting to catalog the narrow yet subtly varied spectrum
of golden hues which describe the rocky landscape and the universal
building material of the Maltese islands. Crusader strongholds, Baroque
palaces, hilltop villages, isolated farmhouses, and Neolithic ruins were
all constructed from the bleached bone of the island chain itself, a
variegated yellow limestone.
So far, our range of warm neutrals sounded like either a sweet grocery
list or the cryptic choices one might encounter in a mail order clothing
catalog: Crust, Toast, Caramel, Honey, Butterscotch, Biscotti, Maple
Sugar, Butter Pecan, Cream. Every one of those subtle shades of gold can
be found abundantly in the natural landscape of the Maltese islands, and
upon the surfaces of millions and millions of native stone blocks which
have been skillfully stacked, in a variety of manmade configurations, for
more than five millennia. It is impossible to paint a picture of the
Maltese archipelago without first taking into account the aureate matrix
of the landscape and architecture, and the golden aura it radiates.
The other primary color in the Maltese archipelago is blue. The
Mediterranean Sea and a mainy cloudless sky produce another bewildering
array of shade variations of the same color: Powder, Cerulean, Aqua,
Azure, Teal, Turquoise, Sapphire, Cobalt, Navy, Midnight. All these tints
and more are found in wide sweeps of ocean; in the confined water of
harbors, bays, and fjords; and in morning, midday, twilight and nighttime
skies.
The Maltese crossroads is a study in yellow and blue. All other
colors simply provide accent – a red flowering poinsettia tree here, a
purple carpet of wild thyme there. In an art class I learned that yellow
and blue are complements, which means that they stand on opposite sides of
the color wheel. Red and green, purple and orange – these are
complements, too. When a pair of complementary colors lie side by side, a
phenomenon occurs: Each color seems more pure and vibrant as a result of
the close association with its opposite.
For
decades advertisers and political candidates have taken advantage of this
color tool in planning campaigns. However, on the islands of Malta this
color synergy is not contrived, it is a natural condition. As a result,
everything in the physical world seems vivid and distinct The golden
crusader fortress fairly vibrates between the sapphire Grand Harbor and
the baby blue sky.
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