Time stopped rue Desnouettes
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As I walked by rue Desnouettes, near the south border of the city, I noticed an old courtyard with cobblestones pavement and ivy on the walls. |
5 comments March 25th, 2007
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As I walked by rue Desnouettes, near the south border of the city, I noticed an old courtyard with cobblestones pavement and ivy on the walls. |
5 comments March 25th, 2007
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On the right bank, just behind the Hôtel de ville, Saint Gervais’s church comes to light between the surrounding medieval buildings. |
6 comments March 18th, 2007
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Since 1986, the Hôtel de Donon hosts the Musée Cognacq-Jay. At the end of the 19th century, Ernest Cognacq and his wife Marie-Louise Jay build an empire with a general store, La Samaritaine. With this fortune they gathered a large collection of paintings and pieces of furniture from the century of lights. The masterpiece is an autoportrait of Maurice Quentin de La Tour (1704-1788) who worked primarily with pastels. You can imagine him climbing this stairs. |
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7 comments March 4th, 2007
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Musée du Quai Branly. |
4 comments February 25th, 2007
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Dark sky and rainbows are common in Paris, in february or march. It means that spring will be back soon. |
9 comments February 11th, 2007
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The name of the place, the “Bateau-Lavoir”, means the laundry-boat because it looked like boats of laundry women floating on the Seine. It’s a buildings in Montmartre. A group of artists lived there at the beginning of the 20th century. After the WWI, they started to move mainly to Montparnasse. Indisputably the most famous resident of the place was Pablo Picasso (1904-1909) where he lived with his dog Frika. He reputedly invented cubism there and painted one of his finest works Les Demoiselles d’Avignon. Other well-known artists lived in the Bateau-Lavoir: The building were destroyed by a fire in 1970 and rebuild shortly after. |
6 comments February 4th, 2007
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Pont Alexandre III is an arch bridge that spans the Seine, connecting the Champs-Élysées quarter and the Invalides and Eiffel Tower Quarter, regarded by many as one of the prettiest in Paris. The bridge, with its exuberant Art Nouveau lamps, cherubs, nymphs and winged horses at either end, was built between 1896 and 1900. It was named after Tsar Alexander III (father of Nicholas II) of Russia. It was Nicholas II who laid the foundation stone in October 1896. The style of the bridge reflects that of the Grand Palais, to which it leads on the right bank. (wikipedia) |
Add comment January 29th, 2007
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On the top of the Musee d’Orsay, there is a cafe behind this giant clockwork. Don’t forget Orsay was a railwail station before to become a museum. After a drink you can get out, turn left and then discover the most famous painting of the 19th century. I mean the impressionist. By the exit, there is another clockwork, same as the first one. You can see Paris through the glass of the face. |
7 comments January 7th, 2007
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This new year starts on a classical view of the Moulin rouge, the most famous cabaret in the world. Best wishes for 2007. |
9 comments January 1st, 2007
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One of those rainy, misty, freezy night spending a few hours carrying the camera bag and this heavy tripod with frozen fingers. And then, as a surprise, a nice shot coming from the memory card. |
12 comments December 24th, 2006