Showing posts with label France. Show all posts
Showing posts with label France. Show all posts

28.11.11

Paris is Art

Paris has become synonymous with the word art to me. I took 698 pictures in the 4 days we were in Paris and 491 are of art or a building that houses art. One of my favorite days of the whole trip was a visit to the Museum of Modern Art. I have to give a shout out to Jessi here because she was a trooper. I am not sure I could find anyone who would have endured my obsession as well as Jessi. We stayed in the Museum literally the entire day. We had to take a break for lunch because despite that we were hurrying to get through the museum before a late lunch at 3 we were still only about half way through the place. The place is not only huge but completely amazing. It houses just about every artist that I have seen in my art history book from the 21st Century and a vast amount more than that. It is like a dream land of artistic freedom, expression and history. I felt my heart pulsing at every turn finding new pieces that made my dopamine surge. I tried to
only take pictures of my favorite pieces and I ended up with 427 pictures from inside the gallery alone.

In the upstairs gallery there was a contemporary exhibit on the theme of India. It was one of the more amazing contemporary exhibits I have seen in a while and after having just been in India it was even more poignant for us. They touched on themes of mass habitation, religion and technology. One of my favorite pieces was a huge wall with computer boards, cords and various other tech items all stuffed together lining the wall creating an ordered mass of technological waste. Another piece was two huge walls that were facing each other where the artist had built dense city dwellings out of various recycled tin cans which covered the two walls. As you walk between the two walls you feel oppressed by the density and intrigued by the mass details. There were other pieces dealing with sexual assault and the daily life of prostitution, homosexuality and life in the city. I felt impressed by many pieces that I will probably remember for a long time after.

The MOMA Building itself is a work of art. It has transparent tubes on the outside of the building that house the escalators, so all day you can see people coming and going from floor to floor. It is like watching hamsters in a maze. It is adorned with the typical yellow, blue and red attachments from the Bauhaus style. Outside there is a man-made pond around the corner that has various kinetic water sculptures in it. They are really fun to watch and do all sorts of things with spraying, churning, or playing with water. Right in front of the museum there is a big open plaza where street performers can come and vendors set up. It remains pretty open however so you don’t get a sense of chaos. We sat for a while and listened to the cute Dutch performer that was playing when we came out and ended up buying a cd.

Besides art in Paris, we ate macaroons, saw Notre Dame, bought lingerie, and went to the Eiffel tower, and of course ate lots of cheese and bread with wine. That’s what you do in Paris. We had a really pretty great time and had the luxury of staying with some family friends in the city. They took us to Giverny, the location of the retirement house and garden of Monet and we saw the real life view of many of his vast landscape works. There was also quite a nice gallery of impressionist art on the premises, since we didn’t quite get our fill at the Musee D’Arsey. I must say I like Paris. I have been before and I got the same feeling of a quirky sense of calm. I like that. I’d say I could aspire for that.

One more very important detail: Croissants. I don’t think I’ll ever be able to eat another outside of France. I try not to be a snob, but I’ve been ruined. I can never go back to being satisfied. Paris, you force snobbery. It’s not your fault, you’re just better than the rest.

By the way, thank you Eric, Camille and little Izie. It was a pleasure as always to see you. I hope to see you in the states next year. xoxox

16.7.11

On The Farm


We spent a little over a week at the Enjouanisson Farm outside of Auch, France, planting tomatoes, weeding, feeding animals, catching rabbits and trying to determine their genders, cleaning cages, mucking out chicken coops, milling grains and beans for pig food, baby-sitting, and, on one especially exciting morning, tackling sheep, flipping them on their backs, and clipping their nails. We stayed with a British couple, Louisa and Stuart, their kids Harmonie and Phoenix, and a second British couple who arrived a few days after we did to workaway - Sarah and Drew. Despite the hard work we had a relaxing and enjoyable stay. Here are a few of my favorite memories.

Showering after planing 80 tomato plants in the rain and getting covered head to toe in mud on our first day of work

Watching Ben the dog sniffing out mice in the barn


The delicious food Louisa cooked for us

Finally finishing my 16 page medical school application

Getting swamped with hugs from Harmonie and Phoenix on my first night in an obvious attempt to delay their bed time


Watching the kids enjoy their new inflatable swimming pool on an especially hot day

Taking a family trip to the man-made beach beside the lake, where Stuart bought us ice cream

Catching baby bunnies (our most enjoyable farm task by far)



Riding bikes to Montesquiou on our day off


An afternoon in Auch, walking around, sitting at cafes, and eating macaroons


Stopping at a grocery store to buy a stash of amazing European chocolate to combat the stress of applying to medical school. And then eating it ALL.

Watching the sheep we were trying to coral gracefully leap over our make-shift fence, and getting a flashback to counting sheep in order to fall asleep as a child

It happens for real

Flipping the first sheep over onto Drew's lap and seeing a level of angst normally reserved for tragic Renaissance paintings on its face.


Michelangelo's Pieta

Drew with anonymous sheep

And again

We did this all morning

The sheep in general were a lot of fun. When we fed them they turned into a sheep voltron.


Swarming

Just a couple of girls with a bucket of feed

Baby chicks hatching in an incubator next to the kitchen



Petting Gypsy, a very naughty, very lovable dog that burrowed into Sarah and Drew's tent several nights in a row

Harmonie wanting to play dress up in Danielle's sparkly gold bikini (Danielle has been admired by little girls the world over for this swim suit)



Baby piglets!!! And more specifically, seeing three piglets fall asleep stacked on top of each other. Unfortunately before I had time to get the camera the top two had fallen off.



Pretty vistas



Going out to a 3-course meal with Sarah and Drew




Walking around the medieval town after lunch


Bizarre alien flowers we found

Walking around town

Stained glass in an old church we visited

Sarah and Drew

Unsuccessfully attempting to hitch-hike home


Realizing we were unsuccessful at hitch-hiking because Drew was scaring off our potential benefactors with this face: