Sunday, July 13, 2025

Grand Palais

For the 1900 Paris Exposition, among many other structures, two great halls were built: the Petit Palais and the Grand Palais. We've visited the former on numerous occasions. Its collections are world-class, and it would be a featured museum in any other city in the world. And a couple of the best exhibitions we've seen anywhere were at the Petit Palais. (Enter "Petit Palais" and "Paris 1900" in the search box). We'd never made it to the humongously-larger Grand Palais and, lo, it has been closed for renovation for at least the last umpteen years. It reopened, finally, in June, and was high on our list of must-sees. As can be seen from the outer-space view photo below, the Grand Palais is beyond humongous, and what was finally opened was just the great hall. It was impressive enough. I'll mostly let the interior pix speak for themselves. We were there June 17th.

The Petit Palais, on the right, is huge enough to get lost in; the Grand
Palais is maybe ten times larger; be impressed...
Full frontal of the Grand Palais; thanks, Wikipedia

Approaching from the Champs Elysees

General De Gaulle presiding over the scene

The architectural, sculptural, and other aesthetic aspects are pretty
overwhelming


Petit Palais across the street

More of the exterior of the Grand Palais



Now inside the Grand Palais, looking up at the crossing, as it were

Nave

So fin de siecle...



Looking down the length of the great hall

Ernesto Neto's fabric/sculpture thing; which was not the main focus
of our attention

Pano

Fabric sculpture bit


Not that far away


Neto sculpture

Moi, drumming; very briefly

Inside the Grand Palais for an exhibition, 1909; six years after Kittyhawk...
note the assembled aircraft...this kind of thing was normal for the Grand
Palais; in the next several years, it will host some of the collections from
the Pompidou, while it undergoes renovation...



Saturday, July 12, 2025

Rodin Museum, 2

And now, the exterior bits of the Rodin Museum...

Note out-sized hand


Homage to Poussin; or possibly some other painter

View of the hotel from the grounds; sculpture is possibly an homage
a Caravaggio

It's all that close to the Invalides

More spare parts

Victor Hugo and special lady friend muse...

Rare dorsal

Full frontal

Another of the countless burgers; note hands

Note Rodin mobile

Note hands

Balzac

Gates of Hell; note Three Graces dancing above...

Visual relief

"You put you right foot in, you take your right foot out..."

Forecourt view of the place

All the Burghers together...Ham-, Cheese-, Double Ham-, Bacon Double
Cheese-...

A weeks-later pose in our camper...

Rodin Museum, 1

In all our visits to Paris, we had never been to the Rodin museum. As noted in previous posts, we just don't bring that much to the appreciation of sculpture. And Rodin is definitely not our favorite. (We never miss a Bernini). Anyhow, we finally made it, spending several hours and even having a picnic on the grounds after seeing the museum interior. It's a very large affair, considering...and people who like this sort of thing will find it just the sort of thing they like. All this on June 15th.

The main hotel...one of several structures on the site...where the interior
museum collection is; Rodin lived and worked here the last couple decades
of his long life

His most famous creation (copy #12,402); and me

Himself

La Defence, sketch, 1879

Not one of the countless burgers of Calais 

Pano of one of the larger salons

All in a row

Test Kiss; note the grossly over-sized hands...a constant
feature with Rodin

Marble Kiss; note hand

Rare dorsal view of the Three Shadows; the Renaissance featured a huge
discussion of which was superior...painting or sculpture; sculptors emphasized
their three-dimensionality; I'm still supporting painting...

Another of the countless burgers

Typical interior of the hotel

Recreation of how Rodin decorated the place, with his and others'
art works

Helpful chronology of Rodin's life

Victor Hugo

Typical upstairs room

Pallas Athena and the Parthenon; not one of his triumphs

Rodin collected widely and supported other artists;
here, one of several van Goghs



Monet, Belle-Ile en Mer, 1886

Renoir, Female Nude, 1880

Study for Crucifixion
Iris, part of a study for the Victor Hugo monument; muy
controversial; Rodin's answer to Courbet's Origin of the World?

Rodin in His Studio, Rene Avigdor, 1897

The Age of Maturity, Camille Claudel, 1893; Rodin's special lady friend



Spare parts; fortunately, plaster of Paris could be locally
sourced