Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Jenny & Gordon's Magical Adventure

Finally! My sincerest apologies for having been so late with this post -- my excuse is that I am just now crawling out from the weight of nearly 500 photos. I promise PROMISE to not darken your door with all of them -- but rather I will share a select few. Come to Paris with me...

This is our hotel room which I found on http://www.paris35.com/. It was cute and clean and just a stone's throw from the Eiffel Tower.

See, off in the distance, over my head and a bit to the left you can just make out the image of the Eiffel Tower. That's me, hanging out the window of our hotel room.
At night it is spectacular, don't you think?

I can't say what my favorite part of the trip was... but the museums are up there near the top. The D'Orsay Museum was spectacular in the broad range of art it featured in such a small space (compared to the Louvre, the D'Orsay is miniscule.) Among the many statues and paintings and examples of important mid-century furniture styles and the requisite paintings of the Assenscion of Christ, there were dozens and dozens of impressionist paintings. There was Renoir and Gaugin and Rhodin and Monet and Toulouse-Letrec and Van Gogh. I felt I'd been dropped into the best art text and left there to wallow around in it.


Of course one can't go to Paris and not spend an afternoon at the Louvre. Never will I have a command of my words well enough to describe the spectacle of the Louvre. I am dwarfed in it's presence. I can not comprehend it's scope or it's structure. We ventured through only one floor of one wing. If I had a month in Paris it would not be enough to thoroughly explore all the galleries within.
I found just the outside friezes pretty awestriking.

Although Gordon was approproately impressed with all the art surrounding us in the museums and off the bridges and plopped onto street corners, he is really a cathedral sort of tourist. In the shadow of Norte Dame he just seems to breathe better, his color heightens. He beams. He probably would have been happier with this picture had I not hacked off the tops of the church spires... but to be fair, it's a pretty darn big church.
If it's all the same to everyone, I'll just go shopping. I must be a bred in the bone junk shopper. We saw Printemps in Paris and Herrod's in London -- but I really only enjoyed looking at and contemplated buying the junk. These little vendors are called "bookenists" -- in decades past they have been set up to sell rare and antique books... apparently the market for rare book has dried up of late. Although a few hold-outs remain, most of the vendors now sell souvenirs and second-rate art to junk-minded tourists.


The art and architecture aside, Paris might be singularly known for it's peculiar grip on driving skills. I really can't describe it other than to guess that collective population of France dreams of entering the Grande Prix. Here in the mass tangle on the Champs Elysees, facing the Arc de Triomphe, I'll stick to the safety of the bus.
And so, after all the art and architecture, the shopping and traffic hopping, the only sensible thing to do is seek a nice eclair...
Or a real dinner at an outdoor cafe with a good glass of wine.

And so, thank you for coming along. If you care to join me again in a few days there will be more bits of Paris before we take the train to Germany. Till then, Au Revoir.

8 comments:

Queenly Things said...

I loved shopping along the Seine - postcards, posters, books, just a paper lovers dream. I can'twait to see more - I can take 500 photos!!! Glad you're home. We missed you.

Anonymous said...

Jenny, my son just looked at me and asked with concern "Mom.....Why are you crying?" I smiled and said "because I am looking at a friend's dream which came true." Just wonderful. :) Thank you again for my postcard! I loved receiving it! :)

FrenchGardenHouse said...

sigh. and sigh again! What a lovely time you had, friend. A dream come true. I am so happy just looking at the pictures of you and your love in Paris.

All the familiar sights, the petit stalls by the Seine...winking a few tears away like Dori, for your "come true" adventure.
xo Lidy

Tami Bayer said...

Oh my heaven and stars. Thank you for taking me back to 1985. I was there then. I must say that next to the Louvre, the boulangeries were my faves. Love the photos. It looks like a dream vacation. Can't wait to see some photos of what you found on your junking adventures there. I can't stop smiling just imagining it all. ahhhhh

Anonymous said...

Jenny you had a fabulous time, I can tell by the look on your face! Wonderful photos!

I am so happy for you!

Gretel said...

Now we live just across the water and have never been to Paris (in fact I think I've been to France just once when I was 15). What a spendid time you had, it looks as if there was far more for you to do than time to do it in! I think we might have to have a little visit sometime now I've seen your pics.

Debi Ward Kennedy said...

Oh Jennie, I've been waiting for these! How wonderful to see your beaming faces on this adventure....sigh. Just so so so happy for you!!!!

Francie...The Scented Cottage Studio said...

ohh I can take five hundred photos... in fact I want to see them alllll !!!!

Thank you for sharing this wonderful adventure with us.


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