Serge led us up the steep four flights to his ancestral apartment where the ever-pragmatic Gisela [whom I don’t believe we’d since since we were in Chalon-sur-Saône in 1991 for an artists’ residency] had prepared the place immaculately for our visit. We were soon, however,
down, in constant conversation, the street to la Palette, his replacement local since Orestias closed, for lunch outside where I learned many things, including but not limited to how much the French still enjoy their cigarettes, as well as that the origin of the People’s Synthesizer had been inspired by Pulsa’s* [A group with whom I enjoyed a peripheral association for many years through correspondence and sporadic collaboration, none involving electronics] and though their machine had no descendants Serge’s lives on, now semi-legendary…plus we all had lots to say about friends mutual, lost or current and much much [but never enough] else before the two of them took off for Veneux while L. and I settled in until five when in a slight rain [not shown] we walked a very few blocks to meet our great friends
Enrico and subsequently Itaka at the elegant Les Editeurs for tea/coffee and talk. Enrico, with the as yet unmet Bernard Becker, current owner of Radar Ranch, will be in Benicia Tuesday the 16th for food and maybe business, which just shows how far behind this blog might be running…so far behind, in fact, that that most pleasant lunch [sans ‘business’] was over a week ago now. E. and I. left for a musical recital, we located a sad supermarket for a few essentials [Givry, for instance, not sad at all], then went home to hole up with our minimal provisions and backlog of work, not venturing out until after breakfast when [E already flying West] we connected with Itaka at le Cafe Buci [best orange juice ever, croissant, and hot drinks
while waiting] for a privileged look in on her mother’s studio in a tiny courtyard in magical hidden Paris, just around the corner and up a passage from the cafe.
Late morning we walked the Rue du Seine to the Seine where directly across lay the Louvre for
several annoyingly disappointing experiences; long security lines, non-functional credit card
readers and finally mobs to wade through to reach one of the vaunted fifteen or so eating establishments where all we found was a long line snaking towards packaged
sandwiches and reheated quiche but were at least able to sit down outside and finally study the Map on which we located some Wings of Interest and another restaurant [wanted to see what we’d missed]. So, refreshed if not sated, we retraced our steps through the galleries
of Selfie-Shooting Orientals among massive turgid canvases around to and through les Artes
Decoratifs to find the Area of Interest [and restaurant] inexplicably closed off…hmm. We slogged more stairs in search of Northern Europeans where, after the ‘moderns’ [many looking very like thrift store finds at best] and galleries of gigantically overwrought religious motifs – shit’s always crashing out of or into the sky, right?
– came up against yet another inexplicable and unexplained closure.
Back through the overwroughts and under-accomplisheds to find the ascenseur crammed with wheelchairs wanting Down, so descended via the same seemingly endless stairs past interesting-looking rooms of meso-American pottery which came too late; we were beat.
…plus had to beat back through more hordes to the chaotic grand-central-station-like lobby under Mr. You Will Pay [for climate control]’s ecologically stupid pyramid [People do love this thing, right?], after which, seeking Escape, we finally found an inconspicuously humble escalator
leading upwards into, eventually, the Light.
Outside [note wife asleep in the cab]
for the walk across the river, up the rue, past the Canine
and up the many stairs…
Next morning we stayed in until the Delacroix Museum opened, two doors up and in every way
a much welcome anti-Louvre; intimate, quiet, contemplative. It was the painter’s last home, having returned to the arrondissment of his birth to work on a final commission, St. Suplice,
He added a studio in the garden in the back, where some of his collections, sketches and
contemporaneous works reside, as well as in the house, and St. Suplice was a short walk away.
A walk we took as well,
returning through the neighborhood
to la Palette [this time eating in] and home for
more catching-up work. An early dinner at Cafe Buci, settling inside by ourselves
[sidewalk cigarettes, motor fumes and perfumes being too much for our country sensibilities] for meltingly delicious Fois Gras de Canard, endive salads and pinot noir
was followed by a tour of the neighborhood’s many artful shop windows
and home to finish up the Givry for dessert and our too-soon-last night.
Last day allowed a mere morning’s walk…we soon packed off
for the Gare du Nord which we were fortunate to reach with what seemed like more than enough time but, due mainly to the obtuseness of the Brits’ “Border Forces”, nearly wasn’t.
We boarded the train with minutes to spare [hundreds behind us probably didn’t] where I found myself seated next to no window and after two and a quarter hours
were back in jolly Angleland, regardless.
Up in the Heights of Hampstead a Bolognese was simmering on the Aga…
*Coincidentally enough the person pictured in the article cited was the young Serge Tcherepnin, seated absorbing Mystic Truth[s] at Harmony Ranch, Connecticut.
Givry, a wine Katie and I discovered when in Autun. As the waiter at the hotel said, “just a grocery store wine” and back then cost a meer €5 a bottle…..I am heading to NYC today, via Princeton. I will see some Delacroix there. Those French Academic paintings…..wretched! (And how they cranked them out!!)
I think it might have been eleven…a “value” wine as they say here. Not that your local grocer stocks anything like it.
I love the sad cheetah wolf dog.
Baroque nightmares. The Louvre trek is difficult. Pyramid an intrusion.
fast and furious! but hope you enjoyed it nonetheless…
Indeed we did, most especially just being able to hang out on the fourth floor above a quiet street and catch up a bit with our normal lives.
In Paris for several weeks a few years back with a nephew: He wanted to see the Mona Lisa so I suggested that he do that but that I would not join him at the Louvre (already having been burned.) His report was that there were so many people crowded around it, all with cell phones raised to the sky and flashing, that it reminded him of a scene when Madonna exits the stage door after a show. The Delacroix Museum is a favorite of mine. The museum “de la chasse” (think of foxes and hounds), is an obscure and worthwhile visit to make if you can stand guns and dead animals, but a thoroughly strange world, very different than the one in which probably any of us reside, all beautifully organized in a fine old mansion, and blessedly almost unvisited.
And do not pass up “grocery store” wines if you are in a small town grocery store in a wine producing region–they are very apt to be strictly local small lots. A fine light red found in a so-called “supermarket” in a village in the Loire Valley where I worked for about 6 weeks proved worth a great deal more than the one euro fifty it cost. Friends christened it “Fred’s Red”. One it was off the shelf it never re-appeared.
Your Winged Victory photo says it all about the Louvre today. One tip with any of the biggies is to line up one half hour before they open. The line won’t be long and you will have about an hour of good viewing. Plan to leave after that hour.
Good advice, and noted. Enrico, the night before, had said “go early”, but we had no idea how true that was…as for supermarkets, when we were in Chalon the ordinary burgundies were all astoundingly good…Givry [which was quite close] among them.
Nice shots, Mike (and put me down as one of the pyramid lovers).
Like I said, people love it…not me, though; just seems gratuitous [and the space under it, hey…brutal]…but then I don’t love the Louvre much, either.