What's Up? |
Lake at Parc Montsouris |
This is our transportation to the Park - a minibus through the neighborhood. |
Doug and Marie-Elisabeth Clark have been to over 100 countries in Europe, Africa, Asia, Oceania, South America, and North America. Learning about cultures, languages, food, traditions, and the local way of life is a passion. This blog is a way of keeping friends and family updated on our travels.
What's Up? |
Lake at Parc Montsouris |
This is our transportation to the Park - a minibus through the neighborhood. |
No thanks! |
Renoir - Moulin Gallette |
Part of the front of the Mansion |
Tiepolo Fresco |
The architect was the runner-up in the competition for the Paris Opera House |
Luxembourg Palace in Luxembourg Gardens |
A quiet spot in Parc de Bercy |
The vineyard in the Park |
Pubic Art |
Those fabulous chairs in the Luxembourg Gardens - and in many other Paris parks |
Enjoying the Park on a summer-like day |
Feeding the ducks |
One of many sculptures in the Gardens |
Fall Comes to the Luxembourg Gardens |
Holy Trinity Episcopal Cathedral - Rue George V Paris |
Ministry Fair - There was food at every table to entice you into volunteering! |
The Nave |
So what do chocolate and architecture have to do with each other? Both are museums we visited in Paris this trip. We decided to try new museums and to visit some we had not been to in several years. Paris has museums on every subject– from stamps to Picasso to crystal to science to Balzac to dolls to eroticism.
The Chocolate Museum –Le Musée Gourmand du Chocolat (Museum of the Chocolate Lovers) is new in Paris. It seems a little odd to go to a museum on chocolate in Paris run by a chocolate maker from Belgium, but when we saw a special exhibit on the health benefits of chocolate listed in Pariscope, we HAD to go! Any excuse for chocolate consumption!
The museum is not for someone who is new to Paris in my view – our visit was more of a lark. It is not cheap - 9€ - plus 3€ for a hot chocolate at the end. Oh well – to justify chocolate as healthy – why not?
The museum is in an out-of-the-way location in the 10th arrondissement. The three floors contain a history of the cocoa bean, where it grows, how it is processed, its history in the New World, the importance of the bean in Aztec and pre-Columbian America, etc. The introduction of cocoa into Europe is also traced as well as displays of chocolate cups, pots, chocolatiers, porcelain figurines…all things chocolate.
There is also a demonstration area where the process of making chocolate candy is explained – including how filled chocolates are made – yes there were samples!
At the end of the visit, the hot chocolate was supposed to be available. When I saw what looked like an automatic hot chocolate machine I was not happy. As it turned out, this was just for heated milk. We were then given a choice of several flavors – dark chocolate, hazelnut, Aztec, Spanish, etc. We were given a stick with a square of chocolate on the end that we stirred in the warm milk to create our own hot chocolate. Not as good as Angelina’s or Ladurée but good. The Aztec flavor was my choice – it had a slight kick of cayenne and other spices.
Before I forget, yes – there were several displays on the myths about chocolate and the health benefits. No mom – chocolate does not worsen teenage acne – where were the experts when I was 14!
Chocolate has many of the same benefits of red wine.
“Research suggests that red wine and chocolate are good for the mind. It is thought that polyphenols - plant chemicals abundant in dark chocolate and wines - widen blood vessels, speeding the supply of blood to the brain,” according to a study at Northumbria University.
What's even more encouraging is that....
“Researchers at Oxford University reported better cognitive performance and test scores among older people who regularly consumed chocolate, wine, and tea all foods that are high in flavonoids.”
Let’s hear it for flavonoids and us old folks. Red wine and chocolate – I’m convinced!
Cité de l'Architecture et Patrimoine (Heritage) is located in the Palais Chaillot – built for the International Exposition of 1937. It is on a hill across the Seine from the Eiffel Tower.This museum was always the first place Elisabeth took her college students during her 10 years of bringing classes to summer school at the Sorbonne. Not the Louvre, not the Musée d’Orsay, not Notre Dame! Why?
The museum gives you the opportunity to see examples of many centuries of French architecture in one place – to identify the differences between Romanesque (Norman, Provence, Auvergne, Burgundy), Early Gothic, High Gothic, Flamboyant Gothic, Renaissance, etc. This gave the students a guide to what they would be seeing in Paris and France.Although it may seem strange to go to a museum with models of important architectural features instead of looking at the real thing in Paris, it is all in one place making it easier to see the differences. Oh - and the view of the Eiffel Tower isn't bad either!
In 1997, I had joined Elisabeth in Paris at the end of her July program. On one of the last nights, we took the students on an evening Seine cruise on a Bateau Mouche. As we approached the Eiffel Tower, we noticed black smoke coming from a building on the right bank – it was the Architecture Museum in the Palais Chaillot! The Museum suffered major damage. After 10 years of work, the museum reopened in 2007. This was our first time back since it reopened.
There are new additions on the second floor (third American) of modern architecture. A temporary exhibit of the construction of the Millau Motorway Bridge over the River Tarn was interesting – a film including time lapse photography was very well done. The design of the bridge was awarded through a competition and won by a British architect and French engineer – it is one of the tallest in the world. One of the reasons this fascinated me was that we used the motorway to the south of France in the 1990s and were stuck in the typical huge traffic jam caused by the gap in the motorway. We wound our way down to the town of Millau in the gorge of the River Tarn and then up the other side of the valley – it took forever. Years later we sped over the new bridge in minutes!
Millau is famous for another reason. In 1999 an anti-globalization activist demolished a McDonald’s just days before it was to open – as a protest against fast food, Americanization, and genetically altered food. The McDonald’s was eventually rebuilt and years later President Chirac pardoned the activist. Ah France – they love their strikes, marches, and protests!
VIVE LA FRANCE!
Paris has so many wonderful parks, squares, gardens, and open spaces. They range in design and size from the classic to the modern – from small areas tucked in out of the way neighborhoods to massive spaces like the Bois de Boulogne or the Bois de Vincennes on the east and west sides of the City. We love them all! Some have playgrounds, carousels, public art, pétanque courts, concession stands, restaurants, ponds, lakes, flowers….you name it – and you’ll probably find it in a Parisian Park.
One of our favorite activities on this or any trip to Paris is to visit our favorite open spaces but we also like to try new ones. We like to explore for a while and then find a bench in the shade. Mostly we read – doze - and people watch. What a parade of humanity of all ages - kids on pony rides – kids on carousels – walkers with several dogs in tow – well dressed matrons on their afternoon stroll - young people walking hand in hand – police patrols on horseback – pick-up soccer games…..
Parisians have small apartments and few have their own green space except for the occasional balcony or roof garden so open space is especially important - as it is in most large cities. Marie-Elisabeth grew up in an apartment with 4 sisters – six people in about 1,100 square feet AND they had a large apartment by Paris standards. Her twin sisters used to ride tricycles around in circles between two rooms and the central hallway. Getting out of the house and going to an open space is a necessity. In the afternoons, you can always see moms, grandparents, and nannies with kids in the parks. On Wednesday afternoons most schools are not in session so this is a great time to see “kids in action” in the parks, squares, and open spaces.
So far this trip we have gone to the Tuileries, Luxembourg Gardens, Parc Monceau, Parc Montsouris, and today – Parc Bercy. More are on the list – especially one of my favorites – the Place des Vosges.
I’ve already written about Parc Monsouris so today I will add a few comments on some of the others.
The Tuileries are known to most Parisian visitors – the linear space between the Place de la Concorde and the Louvre. Actually it is part of the axis that runs from the Louvre all the way to La Defense in the west of Paris. André Le Nôtre designed the space in the 1660s – he is also the landscape designer of the gardens at Versailles. There are many modern sculptures in the space – some that defy explanation – at a distance we thought that a tree had fallen – we could see the exposed root system on its side – but on closer inspection it was a sculpture!
The art museum Jeu de Paume that houses a collection of Impressionist Art sits at one end of the space. On our first full day in Paris we installed ourselves in chairs to read and relax just above the museum overlooking a pond with fountain. Many Parisian parks have movable chairs for visitors – some with arms, some without, and some that are in a reclining position. I have to avoid the reclining chairs or I would spend the afternoon asleep on our first day in Paris.
The Parc Monceau in the 8th arrondissement is a medium sized space set in an upper class neighborhood. The park had its beginning in the late 1760s but took its present form after expansion. Actually its earliest design was by an English landscape architect. It was opened to the public after the revolution but it was not until 1860 that it was acquired by the City of Paris. At that time Barron Haussmann and his landscape architect shaped it into the space it is today. Yes – Haussmann is everywhere in today’s Paris – some say for the good – some say he destroyed the “real” Paris. Personally I like the wide boulevards and the Haussmannian buildings but the old Paris of the Left Bank and the Marais have their charms – I guess I’ll take both.
Of course maybe I'm prejudiced with my urban studies background. I did not always embrace the "new" planning of my colleagues - too much sameness in places like Irvine and south Orange County where I first worked in Planning.
We spent a great afternoon in the Parc Monceau – munching a sandwich on a bench while watching the Wednesday afternoon kids on the carousel.
Art?
I’ll get to the other parks later – places to go people to see!