While there is more to look at in the Louvre than almost any other building, scenes outside occasionally appear and capture your attention...
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
Deux jours au musée du Louvre
Our Paris cards were good for Sunday and Monday, and we decided to spend both days at the Louvre. I think we have now graduated to the class of hard-core museum-goers: less than a day would have seemed like torture, and less than two certainly painful. We had fortified ourselves the past couple weeks watching art history videos again, especially Richard Brettell's Museum Masterpieces: The Louvre, from The Great Courses. And, of course, we--especially Vicki--have been there before. Lots of times. So, accordingly, this will not be my first post on the Louvre. Others will have appeared in 2009 and 2012, some before that. For now, I'll try to stick to just a few personal favorites and a whole bunch of curiosities and out-takes, leaving the rest to Google Art.
Venus was still there but Sam O'Thrace was away for renovation or whatever; Delacroix's Liberty was back from Lens, as was the marble Hermaphrodite... |
David's sketch of General Bonaparte, 1796 |
Assassination of Marat: love these historical works that themselves become historic |
Millett; easy to see why Van Gogh (and others...Proust) liked his work |
Ingres' study of hands for... |
In the Claude Lorraine room; thinking of Turner... |
Alas, I took half a dozen pix before I saw the "no fotos!" sign; sorry; but, damn, he was good (and one of many artists copying these two days) |
Francois Premier (as John the Baptist), founder of the Louvre and its first great collector (he collected Leonardo, and therefore Leonardo's unsold works too) |
Hubert Robert's 1796 depiction of the grand gallery; the Louvre and its collections were now public property... |
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Plus out-takes
Sellin' baguettes, hand over fist, near the Marche d'Aligre; they were all gone a few minutes later |
A foosball game--as we Americaines might call it--in a public park in Saint-Antoine, one of two; not vandalized |
Lady on stilts at Marche d'Aligre |
Closer up |
Kid-shaped hamburger patties |
Cafe Purple...somewhere in the 11th |
Le mort d'un pigeon, episode trois; la mort de pigeons!; OK, it's a running gag; sort of |
Gendarmes gearing up near the Bastille; turns out they were probably an escort for QE2, who was in town |
Another secluded alley in Saint Antoine |
This in an alley leading to a warehouse, in the10th |
Clean-up after a neighborhood market |
Adjacent to the Bibliotheque Nationale |
Checking out the action over at the Bibliotheque Nationale |
Une promenade dans le 13ème et 14ème arrondissements, avec un arrêt à la bibliothèque nationale
Our Friday walk had some obscure goals: the purchase of an obscure souvenir and the finding of an obscure, not to say, unique, sight. The former took us into the 13th, with an enjoyable side-trip to the impressive national library, and the latter further into the 14th, through more areas not likely seen by tourists.
Our first stop was at one of the offices of the Paris water works, where they sell marvelous carafes for each of the 20 arrondissements; we thought an 11th arrondissement carafe would be cool... |
Alas, the boutique was closed ("c'est exceptionnel!"), but we did get to look at an interesting display of cartoonists' takes on water pollution |
Thus; flippable art; most of it not very kind to the US, but then, what did you expect? |
We moved on to the vast Bibliotheque Nationale Francois Mitterand, another exemplar of new architecture and new Paris, where we hoped to reconnoiter the Ete 14 exhibit for future visitors |
In the bookstore, the audio version of Proust's In Search of Lost Time has been marked down |
Does the Library of Congress have an espace pique-nique? |
Raisinettes, anyone? In the concession area of one of the mega-theaters adjoined to the library; note the neon display, unthinkable in the US |
Outside view; the whole area has been raised 3-4 stories above the original ground |
The entire complex consists of 4 sky-scrapers (here are two them), with connecting multi-level buildings, all surrounding a sizable little forest |
Another of the BNF towers |
On the plaza, looking at more of the amazing architecture |
Walking further on, under an elevated Metro we later took from Denfert Rocherau back to Nation |
And the 19th century Ionic capitals on its piers |
They love jazz here, always have |
And Satchmo gets a very nice little park among the high-rises |
Now walking on the beautiful Boulevard Arago |
By all manner of interesting shoppes...here The Little Prince boutique |
And past the vast, historic La Sante prison |
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