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Art

schools out!

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

today was my last day of finals.

My art class went to the Picasso Museum. We were there for 2 1/2 hours and I saw TWO pieces of Picasso’s art. We did our final presentations in the cafe at the museum and I had to come to my Cinema class directly after the presentations. I was really interested in the first four to five presentations but my attention went to getting in the best position to recieve the most sunlight. Of course I was still listening but then as the presentations went on, the later the presentation the more shy the person, the softer their voice, the less interesting… I tried to pay attention but I was overtaken by sitting in a park in the Picasso Museum on a beautiful day on one of my last days in Paris.

I did my presentatin on Salvador Dali and his hilarious sense of humor… I was laughing while telling the stories of him but my audience seemed to think his paranoia was something to be sad about. I guess they are right. Some would say he was mentally ill, I think he was a comic genius!!

I brought the book of his Interview in Time magazine to show the class. My initial idea was to wear a fake Dali Mustache and bring 25 more so that everyone in the class could wear one during my presentation. I also thought about bringing a pale of milk to stick my foot in while giving my presentation. This is something he was known to do while lecturing at the Sorbonne. I felt it would have been approiate yet a little inappropriate at the same time.

I just finished my Cinema final. It wasn’t too hard. I wanted to buy some of the DVDs we watched in class and bring them back to America to share with everyone but I found out that the DVDs here won’t work in America and they only have French subtitles. so bummer, but maybe I can find them on Amazon.Com

I really can’t believe how fast the time as passed. I am just now getting into the swing of things here and I have to leave! I am not going to lie, I am excited to be back home. But only because I know I am going to be home soon. I do miss everyone! I have some pretty exciting adventures on my plate for the next two weeks. I am going to Budapest and Prague and then Nice if we can find a cheap enough means of getting there. AH!

Well I have to go back to class now, we are watching a movie. All though, techinally, I do not have to be there I still am going to watch it because a) all the movies was have watched have been great and b) out of respect to my teacher!

bisous!

 

I will comment back on your comments when I have more time….. I didn’t even know I could do that!

 

Ciao!

 

Dali

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

Thursday I went to the Salvador Dali exhibition in Montmarte. I had already seen a few of his paintings in other museums but I really didn’t know too much about him or his work.

He was was a very important surrealist artist in Paris, his paintings are so incredibly detailed and bizzare. His images are known to be not exactly as what they appear. Some people would say he was insane, but aren’t most artists a little crazy in their own right.

My favorite paintings of Dali were his illustrations of Alice in Wonderland, they were must brighter and lighter than some of his famous paintings. And plus, Alice in Wonderland is such a fun story to illustrate!

All though Dali was obviously very…. ecentric, maybe borderline insane, his sense of humor was rock solid.

I was laughing out loud by myself as I read an interview of Dali from Time Magazine. It was just a series of simple questions qsked by Philippe Halsman with hilarious one liners from Dali with pictures of him and his mustache. The interview is called Dali’s Mustache. I bought the book form of the interview. I think Ben would find it really funny, because he does love a good mustache.

“How do you celebrate Mother’s Day?”

The picture was the only response. 

Dali was not just a painted or sculpture, Dali designed clothes with Coco Chanel and Christian Dior as well as made movies with Alfred Hitchcock. He was set to make a movie with Walt Disney but it was never completed…. What if Dali HAD done a disney movie? I would LOVE to see that.

Centre Pompidou

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

I can not believe I only have one more week in my program.

Yesterday we went to Centre Pompidou.

http://www.centrepompidou.fr/Pompidou/Accueil. Their website is really cool. You can look at over 6,000 pieces of art from their museum on line!

 

It is home to some of the most famous modern art. I saw pieces of art from Pablo Picasso, Otto Dix, Salvador Dali, Chagall, and Matisse among many other avant garde artists. I can’t remember my favorite artists unfortunatley.

 

I have no idea what this painting is

 

I did see this piece. It is Picasso, I am pretty sure.

this museum was really intersting to see.  The area of the museum were were was sponored by the house of Yves Saint Laurent. pretty fancy, right?

After class my friend, Tasha, and I walked around Les Halles and had lunch and a crepe…. Yes lunch AND a crepe. I have become addicted to crepes I think. If we go one or two days without a crepe, we start feining for one. Thank goodness my stay in Paris is almost over only for the sake of my figure….

Les Halles is known as “the belly of Paris”. It was developed by that “scoundrel” kind Philippe Auguste for merchants and wholesellers in 1183.  But in the 60’s the central marketplace was moved to another location but the square still remains. In the center, the Fountain de Innocents still remains. It it a meeting place for many locals.

 

(thank you to whoever I stole this picture from)

 

Les Halles is an intersting part of the City, not my favorite due to its high tourist population but it was still fun. There were more tattoo parlors in this area than in any other area of Paris. Shoe store after shoe store lined the area.  My friend really wanted to buy a gold pair of reeboks. We also joked about her getting a tatoo. Thank goodness I am not very convincing or else I think she might actually have got a tattoo.

Today we are going to the Salvador Dali museum in Montmarte!

bisous!

 

Victor Hugo

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Before we went to the Musee Carnavalet we visited Victor Hugo’s (author of Les Miserables and Hunchback of Notre Dame, in case any one was wondering) house The house was beautiful but very dark. It was hard to get any good pictures of his house. His bedroom was especially dark, and his bed was so little. I am a pretty short girl and I don’t think I would be able to lay down completely in his tiny bed.


This is the room decorated completely in Chinese art. Victor Hugo and his peers found the east extremely exotic and alluring. This house as well as the house the Musee Carnavalet is in has one room dedicated to Asian art.

Both of these museum’s are in a really cool part of Paris. This area is where the Bastille was charged and demolished, the initial movement of the people to overthrow the royal family. The history of this area gives it a progressive feel today. This is where many of the protests in France today either begin or end.

It is home to the Opera Bastille, an eye-sore to many Parisians. It was built in 1989 and looks like a typical building you would see in America. It does not have the historical, traditional charm the other structures do.

I really don’t know what the counter-part would be in NYC to give you all a reference. My mom said SoHo but I am not quite sure.

The park in the middle of The Place des Vosages, the oldest square in Paris, was full of young mothers with their children. Actually, looking back now, they were more likely to be the children’s nannies.

I imagine the young, aristocratic Parisians live in this neighborhood. The kids of huge families starting their own families. I could be COMPLETELY off base but this is my conclusion. There was undoubtedly but discrete feeling of money and prestige with the inhabitants of this neighborhood.

The shopping was incredible. It wasn’t huge name brand stores Like Christian Dior or Prada. They were stores of smaller designers I had never heard of so I wasn’t intimidated to go into. Once I started to look through the clothes in a few boutiques I became intimidated. These clothes were great, with huge price tags. In my rainnbows, torn up jeans, patagoina fleece, and fanny pack wallet, (a typical american student in Paris, right?) I started to feel especially out of place. I wanted to buy everything and put it on in the store and shed my layer of grummy “Americanisms”.

Again, the discreteness of this neighborhood. It seems like its a small humble area but when you look closer its a hotspot for culture and art, a consequence of having such a grand history of residents.

We walked by a designer who was hand sewing wedding gowns. We were in complete awe of the dresses in the window.

After being shamed by these gorgeous people, clothes, and lifestyles we found lunch closer to the metro (the busier part of town) and had lunch on the steps of the Opera house. Which was pretty cool to me.

After seeing the girls in the neighborhood looking so Parisian and chic, I called my mom that night to send me clothes on the fly.

now I’m rambling. Its dinner time and its a girls birthday tonight. We are going to find a discotech of her choice and celebrate like the parisians do! and don’t worry Nancy, we are classy girls, but thank you for your loving advice.

Musee Carnavalet

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

On Monday we went to Musee Carnavalet. It is the museum of the City of Paris which moves through the history of Paris in a series of rooms that combine painting, sculpture, photography, city models and actual period rooms, furniture and all, which document Paris and the Parisians from medieval to modern times.

This is a scuplture of Louis the XIV, the “Sun King”. His outfit is VERY roman.

This is from a bridge that was destroyed during the Revolution

These dainty men are part of a larger painting that also got ruined during the revolution. This was the only piece of the painting that was restored. These men were VERY important and powerful in France during their time. It’s interesting how truly dainty they look. What you can’t see in these pictures is how life-like their faces are. It was actually surprising how alive they looked.

I would love to have this chaise in my house.

This room was my favorite room BY FAR. We actually only went into this room to stall while another group was in the room we were going to next. This room is a Jewelry Boutique from the early late 20th century. It was very whimsical.

These are actually locks of Marie-Antoinette’s hair! creeeeepy, right? These are pieces of jewlery with her hair. On the left is a ring with braided hair and the on the right is a locket with her hair. It is a little unsettling at first but weren’t giving locks of hair a gesture of love?

In this same museum there was a room with all the furniture from the prison Marie-Antoinette occupied at the end of her life. All though the room looked comfortable and filly to us today, it was truly a prison to Marie-Antoinette who had been living in luxury that none of us could ever imagine. It was also a prison because she was waiting to be put to death and watching her husband and children taken away from her one by one either by death or by force to another prison.

Friday

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

this past weekend was VERY busy.

we were studying Romanesque and Greco-Roman Paris on Friday. We stated at the OLDEST church in Paris. It was right next to Notre Dame. Notre Dame DWARFED this church in size and ornateness. It was a very simple but beautiful church. They still hold services there. I would love to go back on a Sunday for a service. I wouldn’t understand a word they were saying but it would still be be a great experience.

After the church we walked to the Louvre. On the way there we saw a production of a movie. I do not know the name of the movie but we found out that its Russian director and its about a couple during WWII. They were filming on the Seine.  I did not recognize any of the actors. But ill make sure to keep my eye out for a period movie set in Paris during the second world war!

The Louvre was AWESOME! its so big though! I have to go back when I have more time to discover.

we spent a really long time at Venus de Milo. I really find this art interesting because of my Freedom in Rome class from last semester. I could have spent HOURS just in that one wing.

I had to leave the Louvre early to get to my cinema class. I was a little disappointed to take this class at first. I didn’t want to spend my time in Paris watching movies while I could be experiencing Paris for myself. But the class actually turned out to be really interesting.

We watched “The Beat that my Hear Skipped” its about a French gangster who’s really interest is becoming a concert pianist. If it is available in the US, you should rent it!

Musee du Moyen Age

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Our first day of class was at the Musee du Moyen Age in the Latin Quarter of Paris. The museum was a gothic townhouse of the abbots of Cluny…. I have no idea what that means either.

The main feature of the museum was a set of five tapestries from medieval Paris. The tapestries were used to insulate the cold castles as well as a means to communicate with the illiterate since the only people who could read or write back then were royalty and clergy.

There tapestries were so detailed and ornate as well as very mysterious. There is not much known about their origin.

There were also MANY other pieces of art from medieval Paris.

A lot of the art was of the Virgin Mary and an infant. ALL of the art had very strong Christian themes. This one was BY FAR the chubbiest of the sculptures.

This is a comb used during that time

I just finished a class at OU called Freedom in Rome in which we studied the rise and fall of the Roman Empire so I was espeicially excited to see the ruins of the Roman baths but unfortunately they were closed for restoration. My teacher did reassure me that we would see some Roman baths.

These were the heads of statues that had been beheaded. I can not remember why the people decided to be head these particular statues. I think it has something to do with the fear that they might be kings? I definetly zone out while my teacher was explaining the significance of these statues. The restored replicas of these head are in Notre Dame which I will see next Friday and I’ll be sure to remember why they were beheaded

Alyse Marie › Edit — WordPress

But don’t worry, even amongst all of this culture and refinement in Paris, I’m still reminded of my roots often.