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Hôtel Salé

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Hôtel d’Aubert de Fontenay

Musée Picasso
(as distinguished from the Picasso Museum, Museu Picasso in Barcelona Spain)

Rue de Thorigny

Some Sculptured Pediments worked by French Sculptor Martin Desjardins (1637–1694)
(not to be confused the Martin Desjardins the Canadian Hockey Player, born 1967)

ORANGE Picasso

Les Place de Paris

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A Place may be a circular confluence of several streets
forming a circular round-a-bout

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Place des Victoires
Monument: Equistrian Louis XIV
Confluence of Streets: Rue de la Feuillade, Rue Vide Gousset, Rue d’Aboukir, Rue Étienne Marcel, Rue Croix des Petits Champs, and Rue Catinat
Location: 1st and 2nd Arondisements

Pablo Picasso

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ORANGE Picasso
“Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once he grows up”
-Pablo Picasso

His full name is 23 words long
Pablo Diego José Francisco de Paula Juan Nepomuceno María de los Remedios Cipriano de la Santísima Trinidad Martyr Patricio Clito Ruíz y Picasso
https://www.saatchigallery.com/picasso.htm

According to the text on a Paris Calendar:
-Picasso lived most of his life in Paris
-Made his first trip to Paris in 1900
-During his Blue Period, he divided his time between Paris and Barcelona
-In 1911 he was questioned regarding the theft of the Mona Lisa
-During the Second World War, Picasso remained in Paris while the Germans occupied the city
-In 1944, Picasso joined the French Communist Party
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pablo_Picasso#cite_note-CatRez-1

Musée Picasso (Official Website)

Monparnasse Cemetery

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A large sprawling cemetery with even topography, but no shortage of names to explore

Sartre Beauvoir Draft
Jean Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir

Click to access MP_guidemap.pdf

https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/639007/famous-memorials?page=1#sr-7312

http://www.pariscemeteries.com/montparnasse-1/

Notables:
Film: Eric Romer, Jean Seberg
Art: Chaim Soutine
Literature: Samuel Beckett

President Jacques Chirac will be buried in Monparnasse Cemetery

10 Special Things You Should Do at Le Louvre

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ONE une, un
Get there early. Walk up to the Mona Lisa through the uninhabited halls of Le Louvre
Along the way, you will ascend the empty Daru Staircase up to the Winged Victory of Samothrace
(with all the drama of reaching the summit)
The galleries are barren, though there is a sense of urgency. Occasionally a visitor with rush-by, until a museum guard instructs them to walk
Within an hour the halls will be clogged with visitors, some rooms will be closed, so that the flow of visitors only goes one-way (towards the Mona Lisa)
To see this before it becomes congested is a Special Thing
monalisacolor3
TWO
deux
Plan Your Route through Le Louvre floor plan
We like Paintings, so we start on the First Floor of the Denon Wing (which is actually the 2nd Floor)
Then we move over to 2nd Floor (actually the 3rd Floor) of the Richelieu Wing

THREE
trois
Soak-in the Light of the Courtyards (Cours)
(at one time these were external spaces, now covered by high-tech sky-lights)
Captif Color

FOUR
quatre
Rent an Audio Guide
Obtain a Token for the Guide off the Main Entry Hall
Trade this for an audio unit at the entry to any wing at the top of the escalator
One disappointing element of an Audio Guide is just returning the unit, there is sometimes a LONG slow moving line
(one solution may be to pick-up the audio guide at the Sully or Richelieu Wing, which are less busy)
The Denon Wing quickly becomes congrested, probably due to “Lisa”

FIVE cinq
Take a break at the cafe up near the entry to the Richelieu Wing
Everything is Expensive – the Line is long and slow moving
(with little of the speed and efficiency of your local McDonald’s)
Consider bringing-in a small picnic
(one year be brought a small box of Macaroons from Eric Kayser)
(we noticed that the inefficient cafe was replace by a Starbucks, which seem notoriously expensive in Paris)

SIX
six
Master the Maze
A multi-year project: to be familiar with the floor plan
To weave though the rooms and see everything most efficiently
To Not Get Lost, or to recover once you are lost
To find that famous piece of art
And most importantly, to exit Le Louvre
(you have taxed your endurance, just want to leave, but it is not so easy)

SEVEN sept
To Love the Sully Wing
We neglect the Sully Wing, but there is so much to see
Venus de Milo
The Rooms of this oldest wing, which still shows evidence of the Living Quarters for Kings and Queens
The Basement and its signs of the medieval old wall and moat
There are some good paintings to see, although on the average they are smaller paintings in smaller and less ornate rooms (it almost feels like the Budget Louvre)

EIGHT huit
To appreciate the Outside of Le Louvre
The Courtyards, Entry Gates, Fountains, Pyramids and Sculpture
The Adornments on the Facade of the Building on Multi Levels
86 Statutes of Important Men (and Puti higher on the building)
Imagining the historical significance of this space is overwhelming
Le-Louvre

NINE neuve neuf
To savor the people in Le Louvre (in the lines, in the galleries, the security guards, the curators and staff)
To observe the intrusive (mostly private asian) tour guides and be a spectator of cultural differences
To keep a calm presence in this bee-hive of cell phones, selfies and tourists
And, when you are tempted to be a little judgemental, remember “you too are a tourist”

TEN dix
Sketch, Record, Write, Research and be a Sponge
(and try to keep the cell phone in your pack)

Other Louvre Top Ten Links
https://wp.me/p3hvvc-2yf

Air Travel and the Environment

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Greta Thunberg got me thinking

Should I be traveling and flying around

Some suggest that you deter from flying

What if I took a boat to Paris?
It would take 2 weeks

What if I took the train to New York City
Overnight Trip to NYC in Private Room
Avoid the
Airport, the trip to the airport
The early wait at the airport
Business Class Seat on the way back (8 hour ride)
(kinda inconvenient)

What if you split it up?
Train to NYC
Air Plane Back
(a compromise depending on which schedule is best)

Devil’s Advocate:
If I don’t fly, are the airlines going to cancel the flight
No, but if three hundred other people do, they might