Monday, July 1, 2019

Musee d'Orsay: Art Nouveau

Mostly we spend our time looking at the paintings. But this time we spent rather more time looking at the art nouveau collection, mostly furniture, and featuring personal favorite, Hector Guimard.
But first, a small collection from Antoni Gaudi; he didn't do much time in Paris,
methinks, but it was nice to see some of his work (mostly architecture, rather)
represented




















Guimard is best known nowadays for this, his design of stations and graphics
for the Paris Metro, in the 1890s; but he did much else, as we saw in the Paris
1900 exhibition five years ago, and in doing art nouveau tours of Paris

Guimard port-manteau


And this incredible room

Ditto















































































Close-up of the basin

Knocks me out: a banquette de fumoir, smoking bench, for a billiard parlor

Basin, Francois-Rupert Carabin

Guimard, Fanteuils

Guimard, Glass

Guimard, Vase et socle le jardin

Henri Husson, Adrian-Aurelian Hebrard, Coupe; must have
been 7 feet high

So I wandered innocently, if logically, into the next hall, that of the pre-Raphaelites,
and was confronted by this wonder: Jean Delville's School of Plato; the wisteria
and peacock are nice; I never knew that Plato had just 12 disciples...I wonder
which one is Aristotle

Sunday, June 30, 2019

Musee d'Orsay: Favorites And Biggies

The Musee d'Orsay opened in 1986, and, according to my journals and pix, we first visited in 1989, on the first Sherouse European Family Vacation. We have visited it every time we've been in Paris since. The period of art history it covers, 1848 to 1914, is one of our favorites, and every visit brings new discoveries and insights. We were there again on June 18th.
One of the better up-cyclings the world will ever see: the late 19th century railway
portal into Paris from the west and north...just four tracks, according to the exhibit
on the history of the place; and now one of the world's great museums

Manet's Le Dejeuner sur l'herbe...compare with




































Titian's Pastoral Concert, which, I've read, Manet walked past everyday during
his studies in the Louvre




















On the subject of homage, Fanton-Latour's Homage to Delacroix, featuring
several of the intellectual, literary, and artistic biggies of the day

Extreme close-up: Manet and Charles Baudelaire

A favorite view, which you now have to fight to get without all the morons
doing selfies


Some train station!

Renoir's Dance at the Moulin de la Galette



















































French field-trip: they march in quietly, seat themselves in front of the painting,
listen as the teacher tells them about it, take notes on their little assignment sheets,
a few hands go up to ask or answer questions, and they move on; everyone around
them in awe; we've seen this in museum after museum, cathedral after cathedral;
if there's any hope for humanity, it's probably in France



Monet, La Rue Montogeuil, fete du 30 juin, 1878; not
Victory over Prussia Day

Degas, The Dance Class

Degas, Absinthe; personal favorite (just kidding)

Monet, Giverny; scene design for recent Woody Allen movie

Look, kids! It's the Houses of Parliament!

Renoir's Young Girls at the Piano

Cezanne, The Card Players; wait a second! didn't we just see this at the Louis
Vuitton?!

Cezanne, The Solitaire Player, or, Sacre Bleu, I Ran Out of Canvas!

Love this place

Spare parts

But wait! There's more! It's not all in strict chronological or other order, but
rather depends on who donated what, when, and under what stipulations...we'll
seen an extreme case in a later post; anyhow, this is Van Gogh's The Siesta,
perhaps in that same fateful wheat field...

The Orsay's Mona Lisa























































































































































































































































Gustave Courbet, The Painter's Studio, 1855; love Courbet... 











Wednesday, June 26, 2019

Provins Medieval Fair, 3

And sure enough...
Funny faces! Some with original Medieval paint!


Not sure what these ladies were doing...a scriptorium

All lights aglow, probably doing penance for converting the church to secular
purposes during the fair...but don't worry, we'll still have Bingo Monday night

Playing a 16-string nyckelharpa--look it up--she was good,
and very popular with the crowd


For me, Best of Show...a human-powered merry-go-round

So many people in costume, some apparently
authentic, many authentically amusing

Where we had lunch, carb-free galettes

By mid-afternoon the crowds were overwhelming

Medieval dumpster

Jack? Jack Sparrow?!

Steps down to the Medieval book store


Interior

And the show goes on

A 12th century hospital for the poor

Provins' walls

Much as they might have looked eight centuries ago...best fair ever!