Sunday, May 17, 2026

Only In France: Children's Philosophy Bookstore

Rue Racine--which leads directly to the Odeon (Europe's oldest still-operating theater)--has a favorite restaurant and also a number of high-end bespoke shoppes...and also a children's philosophy bookstore. That's right. Children's Philosophy Bookstore. We've walked past it several times when it was closed, but this time it was open, and we had to have an extended look.


Nice lime jacket...yours for $800


The plastic-woven bent-wood chairs and tables are at every
cafe/bistro/bar/salon-de-the in Paris (and France); this shoppe 
makes them to order; the above is priced at €2,380; very bespoke











































Anyhow here is the bookstore
Thought for the day
The world of the philosophers (Paris)

I'll just let this selection of titles say it all...








Collections








Only in France...probably related to philosophy being 
a required subject in high school, since Napoleon

Orangerie [Not]; Fete Du Pain

Our plan, on our penultimate day in Paris, was to visit the Orangerie for its Impressionist works, then walk to Notre Dame for the annual Fete du Pain in the cathedral's forecourt, and then walk back home through the fun St. Germain des Pres neighborhood. Like most plans, it did not survive first contact...but it worked out OK, even better in some respects.

First contact...as Rickie Stevie advises, never leave anything
important until last...

Previous visits to the Orangerie can be seen from here

So we walked back through the Tuileries

And the length of the Louvre

Possibly where the break-in occurred

Looking across the river, the Institut de France

Sketching class

Seen at a bouquaniste

Not all river traffic is tourism; especially in the AM

Tower of St. Jacques

Conciergerie







































































































































































Finally we are at the Fete du Pain


















About which...

Action shot

Currently they are judging sandwich concoctions...

Among the contestants
More entries; the judges dictate the main ingredients, you make a
sandwich out of them...we're talking French here, not PBJ or BLT;
these entries were made by a boulangere (female)
Not far away, a guy is making croissants; the old-fashioned way

Remember to stretch before rolling...





Ample interpretive information (also: rounded=butter)

The line to buy the goodies...



Was actually longer than the line to get into the cathedral

Last Of The Orsay, 2026

On May 10th we made our last visit to the Orsay for the year, visiting the Impressionists, a special exhibit on the identification of stolen art in WWII, and a section of non-Impressionist late 19th century work. 

Personal favorite, always to re-post, Manet's Luncheon on the Grass, 1862

Gustave Caillebotte, The Boating Party or Oarsman in a Top Hat,
1879; acquired by the Musee d'Orsay in 2022 for nearly $50mm;
Caillebotte painted, usually more realistic scenes, but is most remembered
as a patron and collector of the Impressionists; his collection, donated
to the state, is the core of the Orsay's Impressionist department

The identity of the top-hatted oarsman is unknown, 
but I vote for Manet, here shown from a nearby Fanton-Latour
group portrait; Manet and Caillebotte were known to be close,
the former much influencing the latter's realist tendencies

Another Caillebotte, The House Painters, 1877

And more famously, his Floor Scrapers...1875; reminded us a scraping
and caulking the floor of our home in Montana...



Very late Renoir, reverting to his Rubens period?

Van Gogh, Church of Auvers sur Oise, 1890


One of the three Starry Nights


The post-Impressionists had an interest in (manually-operated)
fans and designing images for fans...this one by Gauguin














Another by Toulouse-Lautrec

Unusual Renoir landscape...Algerian scene, 1881

Henri Gervex, A Session of the Painting Jury, before 1885;
a raised umbrella (Paris is more beautiful in the rain") was 
a yes vote; Gervex himself was disqualified from competition 
in the Salon some years earlier (painted a nude that was
considered in poor taste)

An interesting exhibit funded by the American Friends of
the Musee d'Orsay...some of the Orsay's holdings,
recovered from the Germans after 1945, for which proper
owners have never been found...most likely all murdered...
One of Cezanne's many Mt. Victoix landscapes...ruled 
a fake after the war, now considered genuine
























An important earlier Renoir, Madame Alphonse Daudet, 1876

Alfred Stevens, Brother and Sister by the Sea at Honfleur, 1891;
there were many such paintings, many by well-known artists

From a great video on the whole sordid affair... Goering examining
his latest hoard

Due credit to the US Army "Monuments Men," who recovered much
of what had been stolen; watch the movie! read the book!

Rose Valland, museum curator, member of the Resistance, kept meticulous
secret notes on the German plundering, leading to the recovery of many works


Now moving on to another part of the museum...a great sort-of Romeo
and Juliet scene, Alexandre Cabanel, The Death of Francesca de Rimini
and Paolo Malatesta
, 1870; not Romeo and Juliet...

William Bouguereau, Equality Before Death, 1848

William Bouguereau, Birth of Venus, 1879

Cabanel, Birth of Venus, 1863

Jean-Leon Jerome, Young Greeks Attending a Cock Fight, 1846