Saturday, August 15, 2015

Rouen's Musee des Beaux-Arts

It's another fine metropolitan museum, heavy, as one might expect, on Impressionism, but with plenty of other great stuff.
Grand old building
















A whole room of Hubert Robert
















Ingres' portrait of Madame Aymon




















David's portrait of his jailer [geolier]




















You know what by you know who




















A Sisley Seine landscape
















Jardin des Tuileries by Pissarro
















Monet Seine scene
















Renoir Chrysanthemums




















Monet's Rue St. Denis, Fete du 30 Juin 1878




















Another Monet Seine




















Monet before he was Monet; still-life, 1861




















Delacroix self-portrait




















How About Them Apples, Rene Sance, 1527




















The Monkey Painter




















Never miss a Poussin: l'Orage
















The Whale and Jonah, Louis Brandin
















Obligatory Rubens, Adoration of the Bergers




















Caravaggio's Flagellation (2)
















Ribera's Zacharie




















Velasquez's Democritus




















Jan Steen's The Proposition; hmmm...




















Gerard David's Virgin among Virgins
















Even a Della Robbia




















"Italian, 2nd half of 15th century"; not a great Botticelli forgery?
















Delacroix's Justice of Trajan




















Luminais' Les Enerves de Jumieges; it's complicated















On To Rouen

Rather than simply return to Amsterdam the way we had come, along the coast, we chose a more southerly route, at least in France, passing through Rouen, Amiens, and then Lille. For most of our European tour this summer, we had thought we would spend some time in Paris, visiting a few sights that we had missed last summer--the Picasso Museum, which was closed then, and the Fondation Louis Vuitton, which was not yet finished--but when it finally came time to decide and set a course, the temperatures in Paris were going to be in the 90s, and, well, there is always more to see in northern France. So we drove to Rouen and found a campground there, Camping l'Aubette, in St. Leger, a ten minute bus ride to Rouen center. Unfortunately, there are no aires in or near Rouen, but, without electricity, Camping l'Aubette was only 10E a night. Though we had visited Rouen at least a couple times in past years, we spent two days there and saw a good bit we had not seen before, especially the Musee Beaux Arts and the Abbey Church of St. Ouen. The latter, especially, was a revelation. But first, some scenes around Rouen.
It's another halfie-heaven, the old town; not quite a high as Rennes
but a bit more prevalent

















Most pix thus requiring no further comment


















































Resto interior
































A resident spots us, gets our attention, then waves, applauds, and
blows us kisses...

















Zero lot lining near the top























































An occasional Art Nouveau sneaks in




















Leaning in




















The old, large and very flamboyant palace of
justice





















Which saw some action in WWII
















The famous clock
















LaSalle monument




















Rouen ups the ante in the mannequin-pis sweepstakes
















In the lovely charnal house
















Thus
















And thus
















Pretty old town
















Presided over by the hatless Emperor
















On the bus ride back to the campground, our bus driver announces
the bus is defunct; ten minutes later the intervention babe shows
ups, opens the hood, and pulls out the shards of a drive belt; we
waited 20 minutes and caught the next bus