Friday, June 7, 2013

About Paris




"Rien ne se peut comparer à Paris"
(Nothing can be compared with Paris)
   - Eustache Deschamps

“When good Americans die, they go to Paris”
   - Oscar Wilde

“A walk about Paris will provide lessons in history, beauty, and in the point of Life”
   - Thomas Jefferson

"You can please some of the people some of the time; Paris pleases most of the people most of the time"
   - (I said that)

Pinacothèque, Paris

Address: 28 Place de la Madeleine, Paris
Website: www.pinacotheque.com


Tamara de Lempicka - Queen of Art Deco 

Showing from April to 8 September, this exhibition covers the career of one of the prominent exponents of the Art Deco movement. The pictures, very distinctive with their vibrant colours and predominantly featuring strongly portrayed female subjects, are arranged in a roughly chronological way and trace Lempicka's life and work from her years as a young Russian émigrée, through her famous period in 1930s Paris when she moved in artistic and literary circles, to her declining years when changes in her style and her fortune became evident.

The pictures are reasonably well accompanied with explanatory text (in French) and a few incidents in her life are given more detailed treatment, through commentary and letters. There are two very brief film clips which do not add much to the exhibition.

The paintings are stunning and have great impact for the most part - the 'nature morte' (still life studies) less so.

I was slightly disappointed that my three personal favourites - 'La Dormeuse' ('Sleeping Woman'), 'Adam et Ève' and 'Femme à Colombe' ('Woman with a Dove') weren't included.

For those who are interested in seeing an exhibition which presents the movement against which, to some extent, Art Deco was rebelling, the other Pinacothèque site across the road has 'L'Art Nouveau: la Révolution Décorative' - also until September.

I would say that this is a worthwhile visit - allow at least 90 minutes.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Musée de Montmartre

Address: 12/14 rue Cortot, Paris
Website:  http://www.museedemontmartre.fr/


In the bustling, sometimes slightly vulgar streets of Montmartre, which are virtually swamped by tourist traps, this small museum stands quite apart.

The house itself is the oldest in Montmartre and was the home of several artists renowned in the area. It's worth looking up the history.

The collection focuses on the district and at the time of writing, the exhibition featured 'Le Chat Noir' - the history of the various reincarnations of the club, the circus, the 'Can-Can', the personalities and the art of the period, as well as lots of documentation and contemporary publicity material.

One room was set out as a small bar of the period - known as 'un zinc' because of the zinc tops of the bar itself. You will also see what seemed to be the original posters of 'Le Chat Noir' and 'Aristide Bruant' - so often reproduced and on everyone's wall in the 1970s.

Lots of things to see, with music of the period playing in the background.

The gardens are delightful. There are several spots which feature in well-known impressionist pictures. They are well signposted and referenced. Behind the house, you can see the Montmartre vines - old plantings which still produce wine.

All very interesting and worth a visit. For those who are interested, the museum stimulates lots of "I must look that up later" moments.

For those who don't read French, most of the pieces have short English descriptions but the documents are not wholly translated.

Highly recommended.