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Hello everyone at the Aegean Center and anyone else who remembers me.

From Antoinette Herivel-(a student from -Fall 2001)

I have not written to you -but I always think about you all. My time in Italy and Greece was one of the most important "journeys" of my life-even though I had to wait until my 50's ! I was there after going through a very difficult period of my life, and afterwards had many more difficult times and challenges to face. But the Aegean Center, the island, the staff and students were a "gift"----a buffer that helped me to carry on with optimism and continue my learning growing and exploring as an artist, teacher and human being.

I hope to come back to see you all and the wonderful completions of the building-- before I get too far into "seniordom" ! Meanwhile--My piece of Parian Marble from the mine sits in my studio to remind me to treasure each moment of life and to celebrate through making art. I think often about the sea and the hills and the incredible peace and tranquility that I experienced during my stay. I must have picked a lot of oregano whilst I was in Paros, because I managed to save the dried leaves up until recently- in a jar on my kitchen counter! The Canadian variety just does not taste the same, so that means I just have to come back soon!!

Jane-- please put more of your paintings on the website-- I loved seeing what you showed a couple of years ago. I check the website every now and again to keep up with events.

All the best for the new semester,
Antoinette, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada


Dear John and Jane,

I have been thinking about you both, Orfeas, the Aegean Center, Paros. Are you well? How is everything on Paros? You must just be starting / getting ready to start a new semester at the Center. I so admire you both for what you are doing. You really change people's lives in the most beautiful way.

When I first inquired / applied to the Aegean Center back in 2003 I did not think that music would be my main focus. I knew singing was something I wanted to keep up and get better at, but honestly I was drawn to the Aegean Center because of your philosophy and approach to learning, and because of the fine arts. When I realized I had the opportunity (after corresponding with Orfeas) to make music my primary study, it was a very new idea for me but very exciting and something I definitely wanted to pursue. But I had no idea what it would entail. I think I was shocked, at first, to realize how much I didn't know; the learning curve was so steep and I felt like I would never get it right. But Orfeas and you, John and Jane, turned my desire for perfection and idealism into LOVE of my craft. Suddenly music became my chosen craft, quite unexpectedly (though I had always loved it in my heart, I had not realized it until that cold March of 2004 when I began life at the Aegean Center). My experience at the Aegean Center began my transformation from a girl with idealistic dreams and aspirations, into a woman who does what she does because she loves it.

I am now into my second semester in the music program. While I still have no love of the university system, the instructors are wonderful and the program is very good. I have an amazing voice instructor who I love very much. She is Korean and has the most exquisite voice. I feel like I am responding well to her teaching method. Of course I am taking music theory which keeps me on my toes, to say the least. Also taking piano, guitar, music literature, and choir. Last semester for my vocal jury I sang Se Laura Spira (Frescobaldi), The Daises (Barber), Was ist Sylvia (yes, the same one Elli sang in 2004), and Care selve (Handel). This semester I am auditioning for the Vocal Performance program so at the end of the semester I will sing my songs from last semester plus Vezossa aurora, Wir Wandelten (Brahms), and an English art song and contemporary song (probably a jazz or musical theater piece) which are both yet to be decided. It will be a 20 minute recital and I am already a bit nervous for it.

My current professor/voice teacher commented in response to my concerns that I was in the program simply because no other doors seemed open to me, said:
"You are here because you love music. You love to sing, you love to perform. You are doing this because you love it. No other reason is needed-- no other reason is valid."

Yes!
Without my experience at the Aegean Center, I would not be where I am. I know this because, more than anything else, the music program at the Aegean Center made me realize that I could do what I loved to do. I wanted to return again in the fall of 2004 for no other reason other than I love the Aegean Center, I love you, I loved what I was studying, I loved Greece. I tried to intellectualize my reasons for going and returning as if I had to prove to the world that I was making an intelligent decision. But there was no other reason other than love, as sappy and cliche as that may sound. And, believe it or not, love IS the most intelligent thing, I believe, we can act upon.

You know, the longer I am away from my experience with you at the Aegean Center, the more I appreciate it. It has proved to be the moving force in so many things in my life. Thank you for your love, and for giving me that opportunity. You are both so incredible and I miss you very much. Give my love to everyone.

Love, Madia
Madia Cavanagh, (Full year student, 2004)

ELECTED Silence sing to me
And beat upon my whorled ear,
Pipe to me in pastures still and be
The music that I care to hear.
:Gerard Manley Hopkins


Dear John,

"Learn your craft. Understand your medium. Don't obsess trying to find your voice...If you are serious and work and 'look' and 'see' and work and work, your voice will emerge."

These are the thoughts you gave me when I first came to the Aegean Center and began working with you. I have been living by them and they have changed me. I had passion, but no direction. You gave me that. This journey of learning and self-discovery has been incredible. I had no idea life could be this good. My spirit has never felt so free, confident and happy. I feel so capable and no words can express my gratitude for what you have given me. Your selfless kindness, encouragment and faith in me has been the greatest gift. Thank you for everything.

Viki Ciostek


Dear John,

I've been wanting to write this letter for over a year, but it is only now that I find the mental space and time to do so. You have been in my thoughts and I hope this finds you well in Paros, a place that seems far too much like a dreamscape to me now since I was there.

After nearly five years since I began, I have completed my degree in Cultural and Social Anthropology from Stanford. Perhaps you were aware that when I arrived at the Aegean Center in the fall of 2003, I was uncertain if I would return to Stanford: academics were a struggle and I felt depleted by the same paradigm for education I had know my whole life. Although it was not easy following through with my remaining years at Stanford, I felt a stronger foundation of my own values and ways of seeing after my experience in Italy and Greece. And what difficulties did remain, provided points for further shaping and reaffirming my values in response.

I look back to those three and a half months away [at the Aegean Center], as a very seminal period for me. It was the first time I in my life where I felt respected and supported to be in a place of "not knowing." It is rare to be given the time and the space for self-reflection and exploration, not to mention in such a numinous landscape of mythical energies. Our hikes over the hills and shores of Paros remain vivid in my memory; I still feel a profound connection to the land there. It was as if the terrain was a internal topography, externalized: it opened up a channel to my own invitation, allowing me to see things with new eyes. I filled every page of the leather-bound journal you gave us, and rereading through the writings, there is a truthfulness --a authentic voice--in them, that I think will always be at my core. But it was there in Paros that this voice emerged, that I solidified a critical sense of belonging and knowing in the world. I am profoundly grateful for this opportunity, and for you making it so.

I know that you must deal with the mundane problems and logistics of administration for the school, but in the midst of these things, I hope you never loose sight of the larger picture?the essential value and far-reaching effect of the work you do. It is truly a gift, an offering to those who are fortunate enough to receive and experience it.

There is always more to say, but I will leave it here for today. I look forward with great anticipation, to the day I journey back to Paros where the light is more luminous than any place I have ever been. For now, the Center and the land of Paros remain in my heart and I will return to these places again and again as a source of deep beauty.

With love and gratitude, Eva
January 2007
(Student Fall Italy/Greece Session 2003)



" To penetrate into the essence of all being and significance and to release the fragrance of that inner attainment for the guidance and benefit of others, by expressing in the world of forms, truth, love purity and beauty - this is the sole game which has intrinsic and absolute worth. All other happenings, incidents and attainments in themselves can have no lasting importance." : Meher Baba

I feel your school accords with this and that's why I am returning in 2007!

Thank you,
Shirin [Student Autumn 2006]


Yasu, Packs and Carsons. I hope this finds you refreshed after the holidays and looking forward to the next group of curious students. Thank you for all you have shown and shared with all of us. I miss you, the island, Italy, everything - every word from Jeffery about the art we were looking at and the ground we were standing upon, moments with Jane in my studio or the group discussions in the meeting room over a pile of her beautiful art books and pages of quotations that often triggered long conversations. Thank for your patience and the fount of knowledge that you shared; I told you many times and I will tell you again - I "re-learned" how to paint with you and am now facing the challenge of making what I learned integral to my previous process of painting without abandoning all that I loved to do before learning all that you had to give us.

I'm sitting here weeks after I've returned - well, a month now, isn't it? - with thoughts of Paros and Italy and the experience you made available for all of us keeping me up at night. It's not a bad thing, but this wistfulness for a state of mind that shifted when I returned...I have no place to watch the sun set over the sea here, nor a place, an empty room with naught but my paintings and one window with that amazing Parian light as a main light source - my studio became a solace for me at the Center rather than something that I felt I "had" to go to.

I loved the way all of you teach, the idea of learning in the place you live and being part of the place, both in Pistoia and Paroikia, made the experience richer (as I'm sure you've heard many times) and more real. I've said this to many people - I thought my love of Renaissance and Greek art and its history was intense before I left, but now it feels like it's part of me, like I need to look at it and think about it in order to be a happy human being. There were times I realized that I'd never be able to wholly relive this experience, and this makes me sad, but I type that with a smile knowing that there are things that will never be forgotten, even if and when the knowledge of art history fades (I hope not) or the passion for learning art history fades (I hope not), or when my curiosity for literature and pursuit of painting fades (never!), I will still have the simple memories of Place. I will never, ever forget that hike through the cave and that whole day in general, or the way it felt to dive beneath the water and touch an ancient Roman well, or the way it felt to watch the sunset while perched on part of an old church overlooking the sea... simple moments like that I will always treasure.

I know I will never be able to re-live it all - the hikes, the feelings that rose on said hikes (some very frustrating, but my, I learned so much about myself in those moments), the feeling of the Aegean Sea on my skin and the experience of being with a group of people so beautifully curious about everything that it inspires me still... all of it. But, in knowing that, I smile and realize if and when I return, which I will, it will be a new beautifully real but seemingly "waking dream" for me to walk through and find new beauty therein. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

To quote Keats, who I grew interested in while there for different reasons and so sought to learn more about him with Jeffery -

"Was it a vision, or a waking dream?"
"Fled is that music: do I wake or sleep?"

Namaste,
Teresa DiNapoli,
(Fall 2006)



Osiyo, John Pack!
Hope this short note finds you, Jane, Gabriel, and Nathaniel in best of health and happiness. The holiday season has passed and I have finally began to write and draw again. I've found my head FULL of details from my time spent on Paros every time I sit down to write something. It's amazing how much my time there influences my work. Just like you said it would! Furthermore, I've broken the habit of writing on my computer and now everything I write is handwritten first. My experience there not only shows in my work, but my closest friends have commented that I seem to be more centered and calmer now, more focused. For this alone, I owe you a thousand thanks. I've also noticed that I've grown to appreciate silence as its own sort of music. On the long car ride to my sister's house for Christmas dinner, I turned the car radio completely down and just let myself relax. This is new to me! THIS is what I was missing! For it's in these moments of quiet that my mind begins the creative process and the ideas, shy creatures that they are, venture out.

Enough said. I'm sure you've heard it all a million times. I will add, though, that I'm still practicing my Italian and it is improving daily. I plan to return to Italy for a language immersion course sometime in the future and am interested in discussing with you the opportunity to return to the Aegean Center.

Thanks again for everything!
Darla (Student Autumn Italy/Greece Student 2006)



"When someone seeks, it happens that his eyes see only the thing he seeks. and he is able to find nothing, to take nothing, because he always thinks about the thing he is seeking, because he has one goal, because he is obsessed with his goal.

Seeking means: having a goal

Finding means:Being free. Being open. Having no goal"


A year ago, when I decided to come the the Aegean Center, I had no idea what to expect. My feet were always restless, always on the go. I was a runaway looking for something, something that was missing in my soul. You welcomed me with open arms and warm hearts...The term 'Aegean Family' is something an outsider could never understand. You have made my stay magical...simply magical. Your support, your knowledge, your understanding are the least of the gifts you have given me. You have taken me, a lost soul, and guided me through the most incredible Journey...one that has changed me forever and opened my eyes to how beautiful life can be. Your faith in me has ignited a drive and a confidence within myself that I never would have imagined...No words could possibly paint my true gratitude.
I look at you, how beautiful you are together, and how you have created such a beautiful world around you for us students. How you work so hard and battle so many obstacles...You are amazing. It gives me faith and pushes me in not giving up on my own goals and desires. Thank you for everything...everything. I will miss you more than you know.
Love,
Viktoria (Full Year Student 2006)


Leaving Paros means leaving behind a beautiful land (thank you, John, for all the hikes), a culture I've grown fond of and respect. It means leaving behind a school I admire deeply and thought only existed in my dreams, and it means leaving the people who brought it to life. Thank you for opening your hearts. Thank you for all that you have done. No words can truly express how grateful I am.
Leaving Paros means leaving behind a family...a home.

Warm wishes,
Alexandra (Full Year Student 2006)


"To the illuminated mind the whole world burns and sparkles with light..." : Emerson

I keep saying to myself not to be sad because this place doesn't need to be missed as a literal place. The Center is a state of mind that we all take with us. That said, I will miss you all deeply. It has been a beautiful, magical experience, and although 3 months is a short time, what you have embodied in me will last a lifetime. More than anything, you've all instilled in me and inspired me to LOOK, ABSORB and APPRECIATE. For this I can never say enough thanks...

John - I've already written to you about your amazing passion, but I'll reiterate by saying that your earnestness and ardor to learn serves as an example for all who come here to the Aegean Center--you truly are as the change you wish to see in the world, and thus you'll touch, be touched, change and be changed by so many beautiful people. Thank you for allowing me to be one...

To Jeffrey and Liz - for thoroughly teaching to any and all who truly wish to learn - Thank you! I hope to be back to hear it all again, Jeffrey, and to better experience the darkroom, Liz.

Jane! I can't begin to thank you enough. Your patience and kindness helped me to achieve a dream, and I would not have been able to do it without your incredible lessons and endless encouragement. I now will go on, continuing to practice your lessons until I'm satisfied--even if it means setting up stacks of boxes for hours on end! I will miss you so much! I will be back in your class again someday!
For helping all of us to see this sparkling world, THANK YOU ALL!

With Love,
Olivia Pollock (Dec. 2006])


My daughter first came to the Aegean Center to study Art but she has learned more than that, she has learned how to "live"---to live a fulfilled life. You have all been a great inspiration to her. You have provided a safe and peaceful space for her to be and have given her the freedom to explore and expand her creativity. It was such a joy for me to see her so happy, relaxed and contented. What a wonderful gift you have given my daughter. This has been a special year for her and the experience she has had here will always be precious to her and will help her with whatever she will do in the future.

Pui, Parent 2005-2006


Hi John,

I am consistently blown away by what you have done with the school (now the singing program). I just spent some time on the website and pretty much had tears in my eyes the whole time...I am proud: proud of the school, proud of you and Jane, just proud that I had the opportunity/experience. There is no doubt in my mind that my ability to do what I do every day began with you. When I work with my students, I try to extend & emulate what I received from my teachers at the Aegean Center: the trust, compassion, and belief that they can succeed in life.

Julia Cain - 2006 (Student from Fall 1993)<jcain@nwacademy.org>



John, Here is part of a letter that I got from my Grandmother, thought you would like to see it.

Dear Deborah,

Happy Thanksgiving! This is probably the first Thanksgiving you have ever spent any place other than Wayne so I hope it is a memorable one for you and for all of the friends who are there with you. We will be thankful for many things as we sit at the table with your family and your Uncle Doug and his family but one thing in particular is JOHN PACK. He has led you on a most wonderful experience. Every time we read one of your e-mails we are grateful for him and for his wife. Even though we will probably never know them, we are grateful for their leadership, their care of the students in your program, and their interest in opening up your world to so many wonderful things. Bravo!



Dear everyone,

Hello from Vermont and our first foot of snow. I've finished school (just kidding, you never finish school) and have spent some time meditating on the four amazing months I once spent at the Aegean Center. Not only is this place mesmerizing in and of itself (when you meet someone on the outside, someone who knows Paros, the two of you will undoubtedly stand in silence for a moment and smile with the secret knowledge you share, then move on just to be social, because you can't possibly explain to anyone else around you what Paros is like, how important it is) but the school is a diamond in the rough and tumble nonsense it sometimes becomes to "go abroad." If I had never gone to the Aegean Center, I'd never have learned to paint. I went as a writer, and I left as an artist, and as an appreciator of aesthetics, of process, of time and of creation. It's really great to have some splashy stuff on your resume, but it's even better to have an experience like this to add to your *life.* Splashy stuff might get you in a door somewhere, but the Aegean Center is a marble pillar that you can't achieve any other way. You won't ever forget it, and it will continue to ripple out into parts of your life for a long time to come.
Thanks, you beautiful people, and peace to all of you.
Love,
Melissa (Spring 2004)<mbounty@chooseco.com>



Dear John,

It would be right about now that I would be coming by for a visit. I've been back to Europe every other year since 1997, when you first had me over as a visiting artist. But I'm making an exception this year - I will instead do a four-week-long artist residency at Stock 20, a facility in Taichung, Taiwan. I couldn't manage both.

But you, Jane, Gabriel, and the school are in my thoughts. It looks like the school is doing beautifully - a Lefkes studio, a new scholarship or two. It may sound strange, but following the travails of contemporary art, the postmodernist project seems to have run its course. Its greatest proponents are dying off or thoroughly ensconced in comfortable perma-jobs. It's adherents are starting to spend a lot of time trying to figure out what's next. What's next, of course, is what you've been doing for over nearly 20 years - establishing a possibility of faith in art that anyone is welcome to join should they choose. That will take different forms in different places, but the nihlism that has permeated the art world for four decades has finally run up against simple physics. Nature abhors a vacuum, even a vacuum of belief.

Some of what we talked about when I visited in 2003 has come to pass. I now have a corporation, Drawww, which takes a broad view of technique - the skillful application of technology, from the stone age to the computer age - and seeks to foster it for the sake of bringing more artistry into the world. Right now the projects of Drawww are simple ones - an online archive of the writings of a dear former teacher at the University of Miami, the website for my gallery in Miami, and a comics project. But other things - the ones we talked about - are starting to look like real possibilities.

I Hope this finds everyone happy and well. Take care until we speak again.

Yours,
Franklin- 18 October 2005



"My experience at the Aegean Center was one of complete magic. The atmosphere and artistic instruction combined were enough to make any soul sing with glee! I studied solo and ensemble singing with Mr. Orfeas John Munsey, and all i can say is boy, can that man get some of the most foreign and inspiring sounds out of a body. The instruction was rigorous yet incredibly comfortable and the family of artists that is created is completely unique. Never have i had the chance to create a high E with a large, heavy pillow squished between my legs in order to produce the most supported sound from the deep chambers of the body. Orfeas often referred to some of these forms of "torture" as the most important elements within a singer's technique. And i am so greatful to him for it. With a combination of these gentle spirits, the beauty of Paros, the inspiring courses and the passionate greeks, one is sure to find themself within one of the most awe-filled lands on earth. I would venture there if you ever have the chance."
Sheila Karls- (2005 Spring)<skkarls@tds.net> October 2005


Why has it taken me so long to post a note of gratitude and share at least a few of my positive feelings for the Aegean Center?! The Aegean Center is an en experience that remains isolated in my mind as if protected in some magical bubble of wonder... I appreciate beyond words that which the school stands for and is. I am grateful for the teachers who teach with such passion and create such an environment in which students feel protected and free to wonder, learn, absorb, create, expand, reach, build and challenge..... A wonderful community was created, constantly inspired and inspiring....Sewing circles, communal yoga, potluck dinners, sharing stories/music/things/advice, reading and writing back and forth, day and night long photo shoots....and more made the Aegean Center a school all around- not only while in class, in the school or photo lab. This kind of creative environment we shared is truly unique. And what better place than Paros- where natural beauty, wonderful local characters (and animals), the array of aromas and spices... heaps of new things and ways to learn and draw inspiration....
If I could give back at least one fond memory's worth....
I will never forget the Aegean Center and one day I will have the means to give a little something back.
Keep-on!
With lots of love,
Kassandra Lefakinis- (2001 fall/winter)<Kasyx9@hotmail.com> July 2005


So many plans change, so many ways of remembering, so many realizations even a year later. I've never so wanted to give back to a place. Recently I've found myself thinking about how great it would be if I could just send the Aegean Center a whole library of art books, a collection of cameras or a shiny white baby grand to go with all that beautiful Greek whitewash.?omeday. I miss you all--John, Jane, Orfeas, Jeffrey and Liz--and wish you the very best. And Gabriel too.
Susan Kosoff <skosoff@wheelock.edu> July 2005



"When the forms of an old culture are dying, the new culture is created by a few people who are not afraid to be insecure."
- Rudolf Baheo
We are all here on a journey of some kind-some kind of artistic odyssey, out of the limits of our own cultures into the limitlessness of another. Here, we are accepted based on personal, human merit. Here, we are valued for the mere fact that we have experienced life, or that we are just beginning to understand the soul of our lives. Our environment-the culture of Greece, the ethos of Paros, the comfort of the Center, and the passion of John Pack-is our Muse. The inspiration that lies innate in the pure beauty and artistic history of this place has been born within each of us as we continue to hone our craft. Even though we may not participate in each course, we are gaining new appreciation for many art forms. The effort we apply to our art directly connects to the experience of the process and the beauty of our final product. Judgment has no place here; the artists and their work are met only with open-mindedness, constructive support, and encouragement. Each of us is in some way lost, lost in a world that encourages consumerism, materialism, and financial gain. We are of the part of the world that does not subscribe to these beliefs; therefore, we are in essence outsiders, searching for places and people who are like ourselves. So we have come miraculously to find ourselves among a select group of individuals, and we have become, in this short time, a family of artists. We have taken the risk and the opportunity of transplanting ourselves from our everyday routines into the vast unfamiliarity of the Aegean Center, of Paros, of Greece. Being thrown into the 'unfamiliar' challenges our limiting beliefs, our past experiences, and in essence, who we are. This continuous odyssey of losing and discovering who we are defines our art. We are here to experience the process, and when we come out on the other side, we will see it with new eyes.
Suzanne Adams - June 2005


Dear Jane,
Somehow I want to thank you and John for what you are doing, and what you have done for me.I'm not sure it is expressible, and everything I write seems a very lame attempt. I guess I can just say simply that you both caused me to grow and change. What is more valuable than that? But it was also nice to discover that there are some people in the world who hold some of the same artistic values. I've been hunting for schools for the past month, and to be honest, I'm just depressed; they begin to look scarily similar. I know I will be hard-pressed to find a teacher like you. I don't know if it feels a thankless job sometimes, especially with students coming and going, but I hope you will remember your students who believe completely in what you and John do. I am glad that life deposited you on Paros. I also want to thank you for being you even though this may sound strange. You are a steady person, calm and gentle, and strong and firm, and I'm using too many adjectives, but I can't hit on the right one to convey the picture in my mind. I think that if one is determined to learn, learn they will. But when there is a reliable teacher who knows how to mentor as well, learning occurs much faster. So thank you. I've only just started to realize how much of what you have said I have retained. Hopefully something in this letter comes across that does not sound too trite. Love, Elli Seifert
Elli Seifert <jaded_red28@yahoo.com> February 2005


Dear John,
Lately I've been feeling "homesick" for Paros... It was such a thrill to see Jane; it somehow made everything seem real again. I imagine that you are busy getting ready to welcome a new group of students for the spring semester. Is it very cold there? The weather here has been beautiful, but there is nothing comparable to look forward to like the blooming of Parian wildflowers. I hope all is well for you. I think of you often; sometimes it seems like I could just turn the corner and there it would be: the deceptively barren rock of Paros, with its windswept white-washed houses staggering along a coast of breaking blue waves. And a hint of madness from southern winds sweeping through the narrow, uneven streets, as the sun sets with its particular pink-orange glow fingering still-standing ancient terraces. Does anything ever change on Paros, I wonder? I know the answer must be "yes", but there is a spirit resting there that remains constant. And in it all lays enfolded like some precious gem, the Aegean Center, with all its joy and triumph and subtlety. It is such a gift you have given to the students that seek you out; there is so much beauty.
With love, Madia
Madia Cavanagh <madiacavanagh@yahoo.com> February 2005


I would love to hear from you information regarding purchase of students' art work. I live in Brooklyn, NY, but I can arrange for pick-up from Athens. Thank you so much! Regards, Hariclia Makoulis
Hariclia Makoulis <ambrosialusa@netscape.net>
Brooklyn, NY USA - December, 2004


I just read every entry in the guestbook. Yes, every entry! And I am so inspired, excited, and now committed to being there very soon. I know in my heart that this will be a life changing experience and I will make any sacrifice to be a part of that wonderful, magical place.
roxana <roxana_marroquin@hotmail.com>
West New York, NJ US - November, 2004


The Aegean Center is not just a semester abroad; it's an education of the senses. The smell of apricot orchards in the morning; the shimmer of the wind through the olive trees; this is your classroom and these are your teachers: men and women who have seen a lot and thought a lot, who are not afraid to feel. I remember, more distinctly than any day in the classroom, an afternoon eating lunch with Jane. She ordered a plate of fried sardines and a salad. Something about the way she drizzled the olive oil on, something about the way she licked it from her fingers, revealed exactly what it was I had crossed the Atlantic to learn: to savor life, not just live it, for once to be fully engaged. It comforts me to know that there is a place, still, where wonder is still important. It comforts me to know that there is a place where art is a rigorous discipline, a craft, and also a joy. But most of all it comforts me to know that each semester more students experience the magic and mystery of the old world through the eyes of these American dropouts and visionaries, that twice a year, twenty new souls feel what it is to discover life on their own terms. To learn that there is no achievement, only the attempt. That success in life is equal to the honesty of the attempt, the beauty of the attempt. The Greeks, as Keats said, believed that "beauty is truth, truth beauty." There are few places in the world where this is still true and the Aegean Center is one of them. I feel lucky to have discovered it, and to continue to discover it. Some mornings I still wake with a Greek wind on my lips, the taste of a cucumber salad.
Cora Stryker <Cora_Stryker@yahoo.com>
San Francisco, CA U.S.A. - August, 2004


If my experience at the Aegean Center could be summed up in?wo words, it would be 'life changing'. When I first came to the Center last fall, I was an enthusiastic but dispersed artist?resh out of highschool.?hrough my first semester, I took almost every course I could fit into my schedule--two?rawing classes, oil painting, incaustic, writing, art history, literature, beginning singing?nd ensemble.?his last was where I really grew and fell head over heels in love--with performance. With the help of the teachers and their desire to help growing artists to find their path, I was able to narrow down my interests to the performing arts. When I returned to the Aegean Center for the spring semester, I studied solo singing with experienced musician and performer Orfeas John Munsey. In terms of technique, I?as making leaps and bounds within a period of only two or three weeks. By the end of the semester, besides finding an entirely new voice with practice in the belle canto techniques, I had a repertoire ready to be performed.? and the other solo singing students took part in a successful concert and also were provided with recordings to take home.??earned so much about technique, the industry?nd how to make it as a solo performer during that second semester. What I learned helped?e to decide to focus my?rtistic?nergy into one area.?his experience changed my whole plan I had had?or?he next few?ears. I am currently back in my home town of Boston preparing my auditions for the musical theatre department of Boston Conservatory, and I am very excited. I am?erribly grateful as well?or the kind help and support I recieved from Orfeas and?he Pack family.? would not be who I am without their talent and dedication?n their jobs.
Nicole Alba <breathart_8@hotmail.com>
Boston, MA U.S.A. - June, 2004


You will only understand how much you love something when it is time to say goodbye. For me this is Paros and the Aegean Center...I miss it already and know I will return someday soon!
Dan Daley <danielpatrickdaley@hotmail.com>
NY USA - June, 2004


As the 2004 Spring Session came to a close I wanted very much to know every detail about the Center's final week... the student exhibit, the reading, and particularly the solo concerts and ensemble performance. I was one of the first students to attend The Art of Singing program at the Aegean Center for the Fine Arts in the fall of 2003 and it was totally life altering. A mature student, I had studied voice for three years prior to my arrival at the center and was very uncertain of what to expect. I was overwhelmingly surprised! The voice teacher, Orfeas John Munsey, has an incredible wealth of knowledge to share with his students, not to mention his unique style of teaching matched with his enthusiasm. I was completely lifted into a world of musical magic and the learning spectrum was enormous. There was no doubt that I had made the right decision to attend the singing program and I would highly recommend it to anyone. Vocalists of all levels will benefit greatly from the program and their time spent with the extraordinary Orfeas Munsey. The whole experience cannot but change the way one looks at the world and oneself. I will be returning the fall of 2004 to continue individual study with this dynamic teacher of voice.
Catherine Bootsman <bootsman@islandnet.com>
Victoria Canada - June, 2004


During the Italian Session we absorbed a great deal of knowledge, specifically about Italian Renaissance Art. The Villa was truly an experience especially the amazing homemade meals every night shared with our new friends and teachers. Make sure to try the zuccini flowers and gnocchi......yummy!!!! Be sure to ask Jeffrey where to get the best gelato!!! The teachers are incredibly inspirational and provide an encouraging learning environment. ALL the teachers love what they do and want to share their love with us. We gained so much from the Italian session that we decided to return for the following Greece session. Paros is now a second home to us. What makes it so is John, Jane, Liz, Jeffrey, Orfeas, and Gabriel who spread their positive energy and make the school a wonderful place to learn. Feel free to email us with any questions you might have!!!!
DAN & VANA <danielpatrickdaley@hotmail.com, savanakretchmar@yahoo.com>
NY and Chicago, - May, 2004


As I left the port of Parakia on that big ferry, begining my trip back "home", I knew the lights from the blue domed chuches were fading, the sounds of the waves were growing silent, and the smell of jasmine was becoming more faint. But I cried as I sailed away, not so much because I was leaving, but becuase I am one of the precious few who know of this magical place. I don't just mean the beautiful scenery, the sunny days, and the beach...I mean the Aegean Center and Paros both. John, Jane, liz, Jeffrey,and Orpheus made us their family. Paros treated us as locals. I was surrounded every day by beautiful art and people who truly believe in living life to the fullest. That day I left Paros I cried, for all those who will never get to encounter such magic and love. John and Jane, thank you a million times over. i carry everything you have taught me in my heart everyday. i dream of Paros and Italy when I fall asleep at night. You made me believe in what I knew was inside me all along. I love you. I'm sending you hugs from across the sea.
Jessica Elefante <babyj13dance@yahoo.com>
NH, NY USA - March, 2004


I studied with Orfeas John Munsey at the Aegean Center during the Fall 2003 semester in Italy and Greece. I had studied voice for?our years previous to this but I still had so much to learn. Orfeas helped me to develop my chest voice as well as improve my breathing and extend my head voice to its full beauty, I learned so much from him, after my semester at the Center I felt like a real singer. I learned many new peices that I could add to my repetoire and was taught how to teach myself, as a lot of the work was to be done personally in my own time. I found it difficult at times because I didnt feel I could live up to Orfeas's high expectations, but he believed in me and pushed me to develop my voice and my skills. I highly recommend this program to any interested singer, but I must add that one must be very serious in your study as it is difficult and challenging but irreplaceable. I learned so very much during my time at the school, not only in my music development but my own personal development. The independence as well as the friends I gained at the center will last forever. Paros, and the wonderful teachers at the center will capture your heart and I promise you it will be an experience you never forget. If you have any questions I will be happy to answer them!
Meg Cadwell <Meg Cadwell > Thursday, January 08, 2004


John and Jane, merry christmas to you all, I hope you are having a special holiday time together and hopefully getting some rest after all the wonderful craziness of the last weeks. John and Jane, thank you for welcoming me into your world and creating such a special place for all of us to be and to create. The whole experience for me was like a dream come true, which sounds so cheesy but it's true. I've played with art for so long, to actually be in a place where I was learning, breathing and living art was such a gift. I don't know if all along I have been waiting for someone to validate this part of me or for myself to accept it, but this experience was like breathing freely without fear or anxiety. Thank you. I know that wherever I go from here, there will be something from my time at the Aegean Center that will give me rest and hope. I pray that the blessings that you have imparted to us will continue to abound in your lives and those you touch. I love you.
Stacey Blackman <kalabesh@yahoo.com> December, 2003


I have just spent two weeks on Paros visiting my daughter Megan, that included an unforgetable Thanksgiving(I really mean this, ask any of these students where they were on Thanksgiving '03, years from now, and they will tell you with a big smile on their face!). I have just re-read what is on this web site, and the comments of others, and wonder what else I could possibly write that has not already been said and anyone who has come in contact with the Packs and this school, knows how true these comments are. So I will address my words to prospective students and parents who might wonder who these folks are, and is this program all its cracked up to be? My two weeks there, I believe is longer than most parental visits, and frankly it was my vacation that had the happy coincidence of including the very special world that my daughter had found. I had most of the time to myself because Meg had so many school related activities. It was the off season on Paros and this gave me the chance to engage many of the local folks I met in conversation that throngs of tourists dont allow time for. When the subject of John and Jane Pack and the Aegean Center came up, the response was all pretty much the same...loving and envolved parents, responsible and caring educators, and many said that John could be Mayor, he is so well liked. These are qualities that are earned over years on a small island where foreigners are under greater scrutiny by their neighbors. My observations confirmed these opinions, and I will be happy to discuss in more detail anyone who might have questions about the Aegean Center. When I sent the money by wire for the tuition a few months ago, I wondered if I was doing the right thing? Now that I have seen for myself how the program in action, the friends my daughter has made(several, I'm sure, will be life long), the education(on so many levels) she has received in a safe and caring environment, the answer is clearly YES! Thank You all for the memories, your friend...dave cadwell
Dave Cadwell <sixbandaid@yahoo.com>
West Cornwall, Ct USA - December, 2003


Overwhelmed with memories of such a magical time spent with phenomenal people, I sit here, in my 650 sq. ft. apartment in brooklyn, and can still feel freedom in my mind and heart, remnants of my time in Tuscany and Paros. Thank you, Jane, John, Jeff, Liz, Cari, Chris....you remind me of the peace and joy one can have when truly being on her path. Missing you all terribly, Alexandra p.s. my love to all you Fall 2002 students....
Alexandra Maria Elite <alexandraelite@yahoo.com>
New York, NY USA - Monday, August 18, 2003


It is very difficult to explain to the unknowing what an amazing experience and the rare opportunities gained from the Aegean Center for the Fine Arts. When you begin the Monday morning meeting for the first time you begin to work together as a family. The gains and losses are shared as one. With the small group it’s hard not to know something special about each person. The bonds and friendships that are gained remain a lifetime, for these people around you share the same feelings of a new and exciting place. The personal involvement of the teachers with the students is an important part of the program also. Whether it is the class settings or the one on one teaching, valuable knowledge is shared freely and openly. It produced a need for achievement above and beyond the norm expected in most educational environments. I utter the complete truth in saying I learned more in 3 months than I learned in two years at University. I learned not only about art but also relationships with others, relationships with myself and to appreciate what ever is thrown my way. Growing is a must with the Aegean Center, pushing through blocks with art, realizing every day is a new and exciting opportunity and taking advantage of them. The Aegean Center has been the best series of memories in my life, I cherish my time spent on the island with all the wonderful students and the amazing teachers, I count down till I return. I would hope that ANYONE who has any questions or just wants to talk about the center to feel free to e-mail me; I guarantee a response to your letter.
Stephenie Taskey <Stepheniet2001@yahoo.com> August, 2003


Dear Jane and John,

It is difficult for me to be brief about the positive intellectual and emotional gains Ariana derived from attending the Aegean Center of the Fine Arts. From early adolescence on, Ariana had a budding passion for the Arts. A quantum leap in her artistic sensibilities and enthusiasm for it followed after two semesters at your school. In Italy she was exposed through Jeff's lectures and through personal observation to the great Italian Renaissance masters. In Paros she studied Classical history, literature and ancient forms of painting, such as the Fayum tomb portraits and Byzantine Ikonography, while simultaneously learned specific techniques of drawing and painting.
Jane's instruction of these techniques proceeded at the student's own pace. This individualized approach enabled Ariana to absorb and practice these techniques so that she could gradually develop her level of skills and confidence in her abilities. She was immensely stimulated by and gained a great deal of knowledge from her art history and Classic literature courses with Jeff, asking him to personally lecture her on Plato's Symposium after the semester was over. Elizabeth's photography lectures were both informative and inspiring and impacted on Ariana in such a way that she would like to take up photography.
All members of your faculty showed a genuine enthusiasm for teaching, and were eager to impart their knowledge and love of their subjects to the students. Also, there truly was a "safety net" in your school - you and the rest of the faculty were warmly supportive and understanding of the students who were, after all, very far from home.?
Then there is the setting, the island of Paros itself, and her immersion into the culture of Greece. Ariana flourished there, and fell in love with the school, the island and the culture. She made lasting friendships not only with the other students, but with the local people on Paros, from whom she began to pick up a Greek vocabulary of her own. The school housing was incredible: olive, orange, apricot and pomegranate trees surrounded her apartment. She found herself participating in the close-knit community of Paros, attending Easter services in the 1700 year old Byzantine church, preparing Easter dinner for all her fellow students, meeting and embracing the Pariotis.
Our daughter left in September rather shy and reserved and came home an enthusiastic, outgoing and confident young woman, prepared and ready to embrace the next stage of her life.
With many thanks for affording Ariana the opportunity to attend your school and to have an inspirational experience which will impact on her the rest of her life, I remain,

Yours sincerely,
Margaret Taylor <Robertutaylor@aol.com> July, 2003



Thank you, thank you, thank you! Having just returned from the school and settling back to life in Australia, I am remembering and appreciating the wonderful time I spent with you. Inspiring, educational, challenging and so rewarding. I have gained confidence in my creative expression as well as experiencing your professional and caring approach to teaching. I'll never forget my time with you.
Tracey Allen <tracey_allen@hotmail.com>
Sydney, NSW Australia - June, 2003


Dear John, How have you been? I just looked at the Aegean Center web page and it looks fabulous. Perhaps I will get out to Greece and pay you a visit. I mean that seriously, not as small talk. I graduated from college on Monday and have absolutely no plans for the future, other than spending the summer at home in Maine to think about what is next. I majored in Communication and minored in History, with a concentration in US history. I graduated summa cum laude and was given membership in Phi Beta Kappa. I tell you these things not to brag, but rather to congratulate you and your school. In high school, I was a mediocre student, mostly because I didn't have my own internal motivation. During the semester I spent with the Aegean Center, I learned how to produce without external pressure. Equally as important, the experience opened my eyes by exposing me to so much that was different from what I had known before. These things allowed me to blossom in college and realize my full potential. Thank you for making this wonderful opportunity available.
Emily Quesada <equesada@sas.upenn.edu> June, 2003


I like your site. I spend my working day on the web and enjoy working in places like this because I get to see unusual sites. Your site offers some relief. Thank you.
Marcus Ohlund
Seattle, WA United States - May, 2003


John, Liz, Jane, and Jeffrey...It has been 2 years since I was there and I still thinking of the amazing experience I had. I miss it and am still trying to figure out how I can get back..as a student or just to visit Paros again. I will do it and until then...life is good! :)
Sally McCormack <sallymac@maine.rr.com>
Portland, Me USA - March, 2003


John and Jane, I was just looking at your website questbook and wanted to add a comment or two to it. Bob and I were so fortunate to visit Paros, the school and you this summer after Andy had spent most of last year there. Now we know what he was talking about, where he lived, what inspired him, and who inspired him. You have all made a great difference in his life and in ours and we thank you for that. Andy will have his first show on March 22nd here in Minneapolis and some of what he will show will be work from his time on Paros. Thanks so much, Susan and Bob Hardman
Susan Hardman <susanthesage@aol.com>
st. paul, mn usa - March, 2003


Hello everyone! I think about my time at the Aegean Center often. The experiences I had there with you all marked my life. It really helped me see the beauty in life and opened my eyes to the world. I miss you all very much and can't wait to visit again one day. I hope everyone is well. I love the student's artwork from this winter! I hope this new year brings you all happiness in these dark times. Drop me a line or two if you have time.
Auriga Bork <auriga@lynda.com>
Ojai, CA USA - January, 2003


Congratulations on your efforts. All I hope for is that efforts such as yours are rewarded. Merry Christmas to you and your students.
george papoutsakis <skymap@parosmail.com>
paros, greece - December, 2002


Congrats to all! The new building looks fantastic and I can't wait to see it in person. I think if I look closely I can see light coming through all that parian marble. The website also deserves commendation and is both functional and visually appealing...just add a link to the home page from every page. My best to C+C+J+J+G
Casey Saenger <caseysaenger@hotmail.com>
Chevy Chase, MD - October, 2002


Late in the month of September, my wife and I had the good fortune of being guests of the Aegean Fine Arts Center at its campus in Tuscany. I write to sing the praises for the Center as a place of genuine intellectual and creative encounter with Renaissance Italy. The Villa Rospigliosi in Pistoia seemed an ideal setting for the first phase of the work and study of the students. It puts before the students the natural beauty of Tuscany and the luxuriant beauty of a true Renaissance villa, while giving easy access to the well preserved beauty of Renaissance art and architecture. The Center is also blessed with a gifted and caring faculty. Jeffrey Carson's lectures about Reniassance art and architecture and his tour of two churches in Florence were well informed and well done. Jeffrey also shared his passion for poetry and music in after-dinner readings and performances that proved a perfect compliment to the banquet of visual beauty. I have labored in the world of academia for more than twenty years and so trust my sense of a quality educational experience. The short time we spent at the Aegean Center gave every indication of having hired a faculty, set up a campus and developed a curriculum that will truly educate and inspire students of the fine arts.
Tom and Mary Lynn McCollough <tomm@albright.org.il>
Jerusalem, Israel - October, 2002


Through you devoted efforts your site is adding to the sum total of enlightenment in the world many thanks zendo http://oshana.org/
Enlightenment <zendo@yahoo.kr>
NY, NY USA -September, 2002


Greetings to you and your guests. Love what you’ve done with your site. As an educator I can say you have great
Catherine
La Mesa, Ca US - July, 2002


As a graduate from the early seventies I enjoyed reading the entries from more recent years. Their descriptions of transformative experiences would fairly describe my own during the summer of 1972. I am an architect and a painter and my work has been strongly influenced by that Paros summer. You can find examples of my paintings at http://www.realart.com. Best of luck to the school and all its endeavors. Jim Heron
James Heron <bluheronsf@aol.com>
San Francisco, CA USA - April, 2002


On behalf of the 12,000 members of www.GreekFriends.com, the world's largest and fastest-growing Greek cultural/friendship/dating website, your site is really nice. www.GreekFriends.com, Connecting Greeks Everywhere. Yeia sas.
Soula Karas
International - March, 2002


What is the magic recipe of the Center?
Dedicated and thoughtful artists and teachers, a nuturing and inspiring environment, and the pervasive greek light that make most that attend return to what is essential and true in themselves. All that is superfluous is washed away by the soothing water of the aegean sea. I look back on my time at the Centre as a period of utter clarity, self-reflection and wonder. I cherish the flame that was sparked there. Looking at the photos of the exquisite new building I wonder, is it possible for the Center to be more magical? I think that your 'wish-list' program to build a library is an excellent idea. my package is on the way. my love to the Center and all those whose time I shared on Paros, Kessa Spring and Fall 1998
kessa <kessarayanne@hotmail.com>
toronto, ON Canada - February, 2002


Hi John! How's everything going? I recently got a job at Gallery Guide, as an editor's assistant, and while browsing the web saw your site. I hope all is well. I have such wonderful memories of my time at the school. Please keep in touch! Amy
amy hansen <acnrght@aol.com>
Warren, NJ USA - November, 2001


Hi John, Jane, and Gabriel! Just visited the site to see any changes that have been added recently. I also wanted to say a big ya sou to all the fall97ers out there. I love and miss you all! If you're considering the program - i can't recommend it highly enough. It was and is a magical experience that will change you , your art, and your view the of the world.
Insurance Malaysia
Malaysia - November, 2001


Good web site. I am Chairman of the AHEPA Center for Hellenic Studies to provide courses on Hellenism on the Internet. The first course Homer's Odyssey, is being developed by Stanford University.
Kostas Gus Hazifotis <GHazifotis@aol.com>
San Jose, CA USA -November, 2001


Hello from an alum. I've e-mailed you with a few questions about visiting. Hope the school is still thriving. Sounds like it from your web site.
Susan Hilarides Frens <pstorpedo@aol.com>
West Chester, PA USA - October, 2001


It's startling (but maybe not so much), and comforting, and profound to see such similar descriptions of the experience of attending the Aegean Center on Paros: vivid, challenging, magical, educational, inspiring, the stuff of my dreams ever since. John, Jane, Jeffrey, Liz, and all the students from this Spring, thank you for the months I got to spend learning with you and experiencing Paros with you. The world can only be a more beautiful, more intriguing, more educational place from here on out. I'm excited to be a part of this web of people who have had the opportunity to experience the center. I don't doubt we'll all find a way to join forces somehow in the future. . .best of luck to everyone. I hope you're still avidly and adamantly creating away.
Elizabeth Linhoss <thrasne@excite.com>
Seattle and Amherst, WA and MA United States - October, 2001


Hello John, I stopped by the Center's website for the first time in, I don't know how long, two years, perhaps. From reading the "guestbook" entries I can see that you continue to be a source of inspiration, magic and light for many, many people. I am not surprised in the least, having been one of the "inspired" myself! I think what it is, is that you help people open the door to what seems to be a sort of parallel universe--where values are very different, connections are more deeply felt, beauty is valued, and excellence of thought and goals are pursued with a passion rarely encountered in the day to day drill of modern life. You help people open that door, give us a taste of what's on the other side...but it's up to those of us who have been inspired by your gifts and your example to find our own ways to pass through. It took me awhile to understand that.
Congratulations on your new building (but I didn't see the location of any 'darkroom' noted on any of the pictures.??) I'm sure there must be some good stories associated with your quest for the new building and your expansion to Italy and beyond. What a difference 20 years makes! I still remember vividly the watershed that for me was Beginning Photo. at the UNM-Gallup Branch!
It's good to know that there is still a locus of wonder and passion at work somewhere in the world.
All the best, Your friend, Chris - August, 2001


Amanda, THE TRUTH. well put.Thinking of everyone. Everyday.
Emily Bolevice <mcmle@yahoo.com>
Philmont, NY USA - August, 2001


The Aegean Center for Fine Arts completely changed my life. I do not know anyone on my program that left unaffected. To call it a center does not do it justice. It is the living embodiment of the few noble ideas that are fundamental to any kind of artist. It IS truth and beauty. It is also a sense of peace. Jane once passed this quotation out to her painting class: "For the creation of works of art there is a condition of the spirit that must be achieved and preserved at all costs. This condition can be compared to what the religious term a state of grace. It is a state of exaltation, of communion with life, nature and his fellow beings which enables the artist unconsciously to exalt, re-create and transcribe the world around him." (-Dunoyer de Segonzac) This is exactly what the Aegean Center gives you. It allows and encourages you to achieve this state of grace, if you are open to its gentle quiet. Through their honesty about their struggles with their art, John, Jane, Jeffrey, and Liz teach by example. They will talk openly about their frustrations and failures, about melding a practical life with the desire to create art. They teach because they are gifted, with no pretentions, and with a disarming honesty. It is thier openness that makes them the most fearless people I know. You will learn to appreciate beauty, however cliche that sounds. You see, the Aegean Center is above cliches, it is almost as if it is timeless and oblivious to the world around it. You will live slowly, you will feel more, want less. It is a restoration of the soul that allows you the time and space to tap into whichever creative outlet is awaiting. It is a gift that you will carry for the rest of your life. I cannot thank them enough and can only hope that they know how much they do, for it is nothing short of magic. For the Fall 2000 group- I miss you guys and hope to return to Paros soon. Until then, I know I will continue to see you all in my dreams.
Amanda Ely <ade@gwu.edu>
Washington, DC USA - August, 2001


I have done some art course Through distance ed. at Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design. As an older student, I plan to make attending your Center one of the high lights of my middle age. Regards to all, k8:)
k8 McLoughlin <airmiddanu@hotmail.com>
Smithers, BC Canada - August, 2001


What a pleasure to see your website. I was a student at the Aegean School of Fine Arts in 1983! It was an adventure of a lifetime. Lynn Vos
Lynn Vos <lynnvos@hotmail.com>
London, England - July, 2001


Hello my darling Aegean Center! I miss everyone, everything there. Those months were truly charmed. I feel incredibly grateful to have experienced that in my life. The new center is stunning. I'm so happy the building is yours forever! It's great to come online and see all of these familiar names, my fall '97 existence -- I'm sitting here absolutely swimming in nostalgia! I hope everyone is doing well, and I look forward to the day I come to visit again. -Tasha
Natasha Rosow <nrosow@hotmail.com>
Los Angeles, CA USA - Thursday, July 05, 2001


I just wanted to take a moment to let you know John that I think it is an amazing program you are directing here...truly one of the most rewarding and interesting education experiences of my entire life. I think that your values in life and education are well reflected in the structure and focus of the courses and I admire you for chasing an ideal of education that few have yet to maintain in these times. This has been undoubtedly the best three months of my life! I look forward to possibly writing an article about the school and you once I return to journalism in the states. Thank you for everything: this program, Paros itself, and being who you are. Warmly, April
April Wilkner < ">"April Wilkner" >- June, 2001


we are so delighted to have played even a small part in the securing of such a beautiful site for young people to study. Onward! and inward! what a beautiful life! thanks, wendy happy mama to two aegean center students
wendy noyes <snoyes@taconic.net>
Chatham, , NY USA - May, 2001
Best Regards
Maria Demetriades <medusa7@otenet.gr>- May, 2001



Hi, all. I think I was one of the last students enrolled with Brett back in the fall of 1981. I remember many evenings of retsina and listening to jazz records, then heading out the next morning to learn how to take photos in the most brilliant sun I had ever experienced. Toiling away in the movie biz in LA now (the sun's too bright here, too) but Paros has it all over LA for creativity and imagination!
Marc Novak <nova861@hotmail.com>
Los Angeles, CA USA - May, 2001


I was a student at the school in 1972. What a delight to see Brett Taylor's wonderful birds again! I wish you well. Trilby Coolidge
Trilby Coolidge <tcoolidg@nwlink.com>
Seattle, WA 98107 - April, 2001


I have written in this guestbook before but it is only now that I must tell you all that at least once every couple of months I have beautiful, vivid dreams of the Aegean School...projects people are up to, group meals, philisophical sunset walks, moonlit hikes, the feel of whitewashed walls on my back as I sit in on a lecture, the angle of sun on Parian terrain...and still words of wisdom from my teachers and friends from so long ago. I now realize that not only is the institution a real treasure but it has truly become a basic archetype in my personal cosmology. Thanks again. Sincerely,
Julian Parker-Burns <parkerburns@hotmail.com>
Taipei, Taiwan - April, 2001


Hello John, Jane, Gabriel, Liz, Jeffry, and eveyone from Fall of 1997. How could it possibly have been three and a half years already? Not so long ago we were reading Dante at the Villa and Sappho at the school. In the fall, I am beginning a Ph.D. progam which will allow me to research thoughout Europe. Surely I owe much of the desire to do this from four of the most vivid months of my life. Thank you, Aegean Center.
Sasha Colby <sashacolby@hotmail.com>
Victoria, B.C. Canada - April, 2001


I just stopped by again to see what's new on the website. How exciting to see the new building. After reading the glowing comments in the guestbook I am more impatient that ever to experience the magic and inspiration of the Aegean Center and Paros. Not sure whether Fall 2002 is feasible, but without a doubt Fall 2003 is a must. Then I ask myself..."What am I waiting for?"
Cyndy Sedlock <clsedlock@earthlink.net>
Denver, CO USA - March, 2001


I have just recieved information about the Aegean Center. A flame has been ignited. I feel the magnetism of the community that exists out there. I am hoping to be able to experience the essence of Paros, not only in my imagination. In the meantime remember... art is a state of being. Faith
Faith Pheterson <lucidleonardo@yahoo.com>
Gainesville, FL United States - March, 2001


John and Jane! Congratulations on the new space in Paros! It looks fantastic. Not a single day goes by that I do not think of you all and the wonderful time I spent in Paros. The lessons I learned there stay with me always. 10 years later, I still can not thank everyone there enough. All the best, and I hope to see you soon!
Drew Wiedemann <drew@eyeshotproductions.com>
Vallejo, Ca USA - February, 2001


Wonderful, John and Jane (regarding the new building)! I'm not surprised that you prevailed. Mehera told me about how you secured the villa in Italy. She saw in you a huge dedication to your ideal - unstoppable. It shows. I'll send your e-mail on to her. You and Jane have been one of the major influences in her life. Very likely it is because of what might be called your "insistence on beauty". The best to you both,
Anne Makeig - February, 2001


Congratulation, John, on this successful capital campaign and the acquisition of this most excellent building as a permanent home on Paros for the Aegean Center. It was great to see the photos. This is one of those important victories for humanity that requires the combination of vision, motivation, skill, dedication and love that is at the core of all great art. You have my profound admiration, appreciation and respect for creating this new home for the Aegean Center. Yet another motivation for me to come visit! Best regards,
Bruce LeBel - February, 2001


Hello to everyone at The Aegean Center! I just wanted to take a moment to say hi to everyone from spring session 1999, and wish the school my best. The Aegean Center is truely a special place. With such a compassionate approach to teaching Jon, Jane, Elizabeth, and Jeffery have shown me I have realized not what I want to do in life, but how I want to live and look at life. Role models like you are rare, I have looked and have found few. There isnt a day that goes by that I dont wish our paths will meet again. I believe in all that you do for the school. Take good care! love, Jessica Crimmins - January, 2001

I attended the program in the spring and fall of 2000. Having attended other study abroad programs, I can say this one is unique, this one is special. The surroundings of both Italy and Greece are magical. But what truely makes the program, are the professors themselves, including John Pack. They have given their lives to make this program a success, and it shows. I can not thank them enough for their generosity in their teaching of both the Arts and of how to truely obtain happiness in one's life. This experience and the lessons learned will always be an important part of who I am. I too wish that you too can have such an amazing experience. I Thank you!
Scott Woytowick <swoyt1@hotmail.com>- January, 2001


hello John and Jane! Greetings from the states, I wish that it were as sunny and beautiful as Paros, but it's been pretty cold and rainy for the past few days. It's been a tiring last few days trying to re-adjust and get back into the swing of things here. I am trying to get organized for the holidays and for going back to school. It is going to be difficult to go back to such a structured environment. I can't express how much I learned and loved in Greece. The independence and freedom and access to so many new experiences, amazing people, and art has had such a positive impact on my life. I feel like have learned and grown so much, but it makes going back to school all the harder knowing all the things that are out there! But I am anxious to apply all of these wonderful things that i have learned back to Carleton... I hope you all are having a relaxing post-fall term and nice holiday. Tell everyone that I say hello, and Jane-i'm asking for many byzantine art books for Christmas. Right now I'm reading "The Art Game," which I recommend to you by Robert Wraight about the contemporary art-scene. It has some great quotes perhaps for your sheets:" Nowadays people know the price of everything and the value of nothing."-Oscar Wilde. Again, I don't think that i can thank you enough or articulate how much the program has meant to me. I hope we will all keep in touch and that you realize the greatness of your program that can only continue to get better with all the new additions and buildings.Happy Holidays, March
March Halsey <kmhalsey@yahoo.com>- December, 2000


Dear John, Your trust and open heartedness inspire me. I will definitely send this on to Lonnie, and any one else who I know could possibly help... I can definitely go on and on about how much you and the school has been a great gift in my life and how I too feel that we will be in each other's life for a long time. I believe in you and am inspired by your aims. Give my love to Gabriel and Jane. It was so good to see all of you again. I hope to see you in the new building in the not to distant future. With my deepest love, respect and support, Mehera
Mehera - November, 2000


Being a student of the Aegean Center and a resident of Paros has changed the way I see the world. There is a certain beautiful and dreamlike quality in everything that surrounds us and our task is to learn how to see it. Hiking through Paros made me feel like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz. The world around me was foreign and dreamlike, not because I was in a foreign country, but because I was allowing myself to sink into the pure beauty and warmth that surrounded me. In the past, I created a cold, material world around me without even knowing I was doing it. The teachers of the Aegean Center immersed me in the history and beauty of Paros, which made me feel as though I was stripping away layers of myself and uncovering the core of my happiness. Paros and the people of Paros have provided the serenity and innocence that allowed me to step out of my securities, shed the layers of material influences and false happiness, and take a new look at myself. Upon leaving the Aegean Center and Paros, I had never felt so real, cleansed, and purely happy.
April <April42780@aol.com>- February, 2000


The Aegean Center remains the single most inspiring arts education I have ever had. I graduated from UMASS at Amherst with a BFA in Painting, did a year of study abroad at the Exeter College of Art in England, organized and directed an artist's collective art gallery, have shown in numerous restaurants, coffee shops, study centers and art galleries and, still, the Aegean Center keeps returning to me as the spiritual home for my love of creating works of art. It was in 1987 on Paros that I first found a family of artists. I was surrounded by a mythological landscape populated by very real people. My teachers lived and breathed every moment of the day with creative insight and outlook that demanded my honesty and nurtured my personal vision. For instance, one of my first paintings on Paros was a surrealistic depiction of everything American (Coke cans, and old girl friend, an old Ford convertible, etc.) but way in the background was a whitewashed, Mediteranian seaside village. My instructor asked me if this was what I was seeing here in Paros and I answered, "Yes...This is what I'm seeing here." In turn, the instructor then asked if perhaps I was a little homesick and pointed out the girlfriend, the car and the Coke can spelled out in English. In that moment I suddenly realized the lie to myself and couldn't come up with an answer. The instructor then made my awkwardness OK by saying that I was probably just working on old imagery. She then pointed out the depiction of the seaside village in the background of my painting and said, "I can see that you are still arriving...You'll be here soon, don't worry." Well, I soon "arrived" and as far as I'm concerned, never left. Awakening moments such as this were around every whitewashed corner, up every windmilled hill and in every My times (I went back there with my sister in 1991) on Paros with the Aegean Center have left me with a strong sense discipline towards my art being able to see "magic" in everything. I highly recommend this program to anyone who wants to experience what it is to come home to your artistic family. If anyone has any questions, please feel free to contact me at Julian51469@aol.com. Thank you.
Julian <Julian51469@aol.com>USA - October, 1999


hi, I'm an allum from the early seventies. I would really like get in touch with some of the other students who were at Paros in the summer of '72. Anyone else out there?
Andy Senesac <afs2@cornell.edu>
Riverhead, NY USA -September, 1999


This page is really a sourse of inspiration!Thank you!It would be great to know more about this center!
Maria <alexanderbeach@mail.ru>
Moscow, Russia - September, 1999


Hi Everyone!!!!From fall 1997 This web site is such a wonderful way to keep in contact.Sasha and I were talking the other day and there is no way to relive this experience unless it's with someone who knows,someone who has been there.I miss everyone.Believe it or not,Edward,seeing your message brought tears to my eyes.Take care,Oh ya, also I want all of you to know that you and this experience has inspired me to go to art school full time.I start tommorow.Love,Terri
Terri Cutz <cutzt@rocketmail.com>
Portland, Or. Mult. - Sunday, August 29, 1999


Best damn'd school I ever went to.
Joseph Valentino <camileprice@sprintmail.com>
Fishkill, NY USA - July, 1999


Hey John, Jan, Liz, Jefferey and Gabriel! How are you all? I can't believe how long it has been since my fall 97 term...I miss it so much. You will be happy to know that I still see Tasha, Kim, Karina and Anna all the time...in fact I am moving into an apartment with Kim this summer. Naturally I still see Steph as well. My freind Mo (Missouri) Ammons is applying for this fall semester and I am so excited for her. I only wish I could come back with her. I MISS PAROS! Hope all the other fall 97ers are good. Ciao. -Ed
Edward Droste <edroste@yahoo.com>
Watertown, MA USA - March, 1999


ciao to the fall 98 group...travels have brought us together again and on our way to see dana and movius in boston, ya mas to you all as we share a bottle of paros wine love, tara & heather
stowe , vt usa - January, 1999


Dear Mr. Pack, I want to take a moment to thank you and the Agean Center for the incredible job you are doing with my daughter's education. The enthusiastic calls and emails back to us have been glowingly positive and her life is forever changed by the experience she is having. I'm hearing about the volcano sites, Sappho, the beauty of Greece and the amazing history and archaeology and about her photography and the atmosphere there on Paros. I can't help but be excited for her and so happy to see her so engaged and turned on by learning. We wish you continued success and hope this email finds you well. Sincerely, Lorie Josephsen
Lorie Josephsen- November, 1998


It's nice to see that the school is still thriving. I spent only a short time on Paros, but the work I did there was a breaking point from middling scribble to real art. Best wishes for the future.
Chris Baker <xoffsett@yahoo.com>
Portland, OR US -October, 1998


Hello from an alumnus from the early 70's. Your web page fills me with wonderful memories!
Michel Boynton <mbboynton@earthlink.net>
Mill Valley, CA USA - July, 1998


Hi John, Jane, and Gabriel! Just visited the site to see any changes that have been added recently. I also wanted to say a big ya sou to all the fall97ers out there. I love and miss you all! If you're considering the program - i can't recommend it highly enough. It was and is a magical experience that will change you , your art, and your view the of the world. One day I'll get back to paros for a visit or enroll in the program again- who knows? Aloha!
Erin Fuse <erin.fuse@dartmouth.edu>
Honolulu, HI USA - July, 1998


Ya sou, John. Glad to know that the school's doing well. Hope to visit Greece again in the future. I miss the Mediterranean weather and taking siestas. . . .
Paul Makino <paulmakino@hotmail.com>
Osaka, Japan - June, 1998


Hi John and Jane, Greetings from Canada (-20 below and lots of snow). The web page looks great and we sure miss Paros, and the wonderful school. All the best.
David and Sandie Cheney <dtachene@acs.ucalgary.ca>
Calgary, AB Canada - January, 1998