After such a positive experience with my Ostrich and human friends in Bulgaria, I decided to take another few weeks out of my schedule and head to a small village in Serbia to volunteer. No ostriches this time. Instead I have spent the last 4 weeks working at an artist’s retreat where not only do I help with the running of the place, I was able to indulge my own artistic tendencies and my secret dream of being an artist/creative type.
My work at the Erdevik Artists Residency & Permaculture program (EARP) has definitely not been as intense in terms of work load. I know comparing the two volunteer positions is not helpful, but I think it’s hard not to. Here, I have been cooking, cleaning and spending a lot of time down at the two lakes that are each about 2 kilometres from the retreat. It has been so relaxing and, unfortunately, at times, this has led to me feeling a little guilty about the amount I have been doing. As I mentioned in my post about WWOOFing in July, the exchange for WWOOFers is simple, you work, they feed you and give you a place to rest your head. I felt if I wasn’t pulling my weight I would be a burden here, but my host hasn’t kicked me out, so that’s saying something. Also, comparing it to the structure and hard work of the Ostrich farm makes EARP seem positively slow in comparison. Perhaps this says more about my need to switch of my brain and relax than anything else.
I have explored some amazing galleries across Europe so far and seen some of the best works ever created. I have always enjoyed art, but I have never really put the time in gaining any skills that will help me actually be decent at it. Here I have spent many afternoons drawing with pastels, creating mosaics on steps, painting in acrylic and oils, printing with a silk screen, drawing in ink, sketching in charcoal, painting in watercolour, making collages, printing and sketching. I have by no means become an expert, but I think I have been improving my ideas and skills. I have come all the way to Serbia, to a small village to ‘be artistic’ for a month. Which to me, seems crazy! These are things I could not have foreseen just a few months ago. I have a full sketchbook, 2 works on canvas and a few marks in and on the house and garden to show for it. I even got to see the work of a local Serbian artist, Sava Sumanovic in a gallery a few villages over for some inspiration.
I have found that village life has agreed with me while I have been here. It is so quiet and peaceful, no-one ever seems to be rushing and this has given me a great chance to relax. I have enjoyed walks around, picking fruit off the trees, trips to the lake for a swim and a people watch and saying “Dobro Dan” to every person who walks past me. Speaking of the people of the village, this has been one of my favourite aspects of staying here. One afternoon I went to give our neighbour some carrots for his goats, he offered me a beer and remembering my pact with myself to say yes more often, I did. We sat around his kitchen table speaking our own languages and not really understanding each other. Despite this we were both laughing and smiling. We found some common ground because we both knew some Italian words and he knew how to say that his brother lived in Sydney. He then went to another room and emerged with a map of the world with Australia placed over the top of other countries for size comparison. He exclaimed “Australie, very big” and mimed ‘large’ by throwing his hand around above his head. But the kindness of the people of Erdevik didn’t stop there. My host’s neighbour often comes around to cook dinner and takes us to the lake in his car so we don’t have to walk the strenuous 2 kilometres to get to either of the lakes; At the Kotlicijada festival we attended I was given more food and wine by strangers than I had ever been in my life; I have never been offered (or drunk) so much home made alcohol, known as rakija; When I was mosaicing the front step one man stopped to give me fresh blackberries and a little girl gave me a flower. In my regular life I would be highly suspicious of any of these behaviours. Free food? Do you want me to buy something? or wine? Hmmm, have you spiked it? But here I feel none of that, there is a genuineness about the people, they have very little, but they still give so much to each other.
But what is the Kotlicijada festival I hear you ask? Well, I think Kotlicijada was one of my favourite days of the whole year so far. It was a cooking competition, where the people of Erdevik make their own goulash over an open flame by the lake. There were about 18 pots entered in the contest. The teams have 3 hours to make their meals which are then blind tasted and judged. The goulash was delicious, and of course, I was offered many plates to try, but this was not the best part. I loved sitting around with a wine and listening to people talk in Serbian. They stared at me, I guess I was a bit of an oddity, but they were kind and welcoming. Some other WWOOFers and artists from EARP also ran an art workshop with some local children. We made origami cranes and ninja stars. No surprises that a Japanese artist ran the workshop, but we all helped teach the children. The kids enjoyed it and there was lots of laughter and poor folding. Many kids came back several times to learn new folds and creations, as did some adults. By the end of the day with my stomach full of goulash and my head full of wine I realised how lucky I was to be there and to have a traditional and local experience. Meeting real people, not just other travellers. We came last in the cooking competition, by the way.
On either side of the village there are two lakes. One lake, known as Moharac, is a sprawling lake surrounded by farm land, corn fields and some smallish mountains. The other lake, Jezero Bruje is a smaller, more shallow lake that apparently has healing properties for the skin due to the sulphur content of the water. I have wiled away many an afternoon hanging out by the lake in the sunshine. But it hasn’t all been lakes and goulash. I have done some work here, most of it in the kitchen. I have improved my bread recipe, picked, sorted and peeled potatoes, made jams, pickled beetroot and made breakfasts, lunches and dinners for up to 8 people. I have also painted the floor and doors, made curtains, cleaned, gardened and generally helped where I can around the house.
The house itself is a bustling hive of actiivty. There are always visitors. Neighbours, friends and even the electrician comes around almost daily. He greets me with a loud and mildly sleazy ‘Ciiiaaooooo Alison’, a wink, a pear and often a comment in Serbian about how beautiful I am. There are also many volunteers and artists who have come from all corners of the globe. Scotland, Finland, Australia, The Netherlands, Egypt, Moldova, Japan and Serbia have all been represented in the month that I was there. Everyone has been so different and I feel like I have learned something from many of them and I know many of the relationships will continue into the future and may even end in collaborations, including a writing and illustration collaboration with my new favourite Moldovan.
This has been a tough one to write. How do I sum up a month’s worth of creativity, laughs, rakija & pears from strangers? I originally planned to stay here for 2 weeks, then it became 3, then it became 4. It is the longest I have stayed in any place since I left Australia, it is the most at home I’ve felt and above all else it’s the most creative I’ve been able to be in a long, long time.







