Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Day Four - Paris: Musée d'Orsay, Musée de l'Orangerie, La Seine

This was the first day on which I left early to shoot some photos. It was also also the only day for wet Paris streets. The multiple versions of the same images illustrate the challenge of post processing. Once you start … where to stop? What is the best crop for this shot? Would it look better in black and white or color? Heavily saturated or desaturated and highly contrasted? Sigh.


After returning we all traveled together to the Musée d'Orsay, which boasts the greatest Impressionist collection in the world. I really is an impressive museum and one I wish I lived near. We wandered the museum separately. I was with Dietrich most of the time and we started with the post-impressionists and almost missed the main impressionist collection.


Some highlights of the museum were:


Learning more about the influence of Medieval stained glass upon the Impressionists and Post-Impressionists. This was a revelation to me, clearest in Emile Bernard’s, “Moisson au bord de la mer.” Many things about modern art begin with the impressionists.


Up close, Van Gogh’s 1888 portrait of Eugene Boch and 1889 Portrait De l’Artisteach demonstrated an intensity of the eyes that I did not know could be captured with his technique.


Théo van Rysselberghe’s “L'homme à la barre” reminded Dietrich of the spirit of The Old Man and the Sea.


Edgar Degas’ “Danseuses montant un escalier” was a surprising wide format painting, particularly interesting in light of my recent experiments with the Facebook banner format -- a very wide and very precise 851 x 315.


Jen was particularly struck by the vividness of some of the impressionist snowscapes, especially those of Alfred Sisley.


Here are a few more intriguing pieces: Gustave Caillebotte’s “Les raboteurs de parquet”, Gustave Guillaumet, “Le Sahara”, Gustave Courbet, “La Falaise d'Etretat apres l'orage”, Jules-Alexis Muenier, “La leçon de catéchisme”.


Nickolai Ge’s “Crucifixion”, however, was the biggest stumbled-upon surprise of the whole trip, as it is the crucifixion that has most moved me over the years. Ge was not an orthodox believer, but was moved by the humanity of Christ and the passion at a time when a little humanism was probably needed in approaching our Lord. I turned a corner into a side room at the Musée d'Orsay and there it was!


We grabbed lunch at a crêperie right near the museum (one word: “Don’t”) and took it down with us to banks of the Seine (one word: “Do”).


Lingering along the banks of the Seine for a while, at a place where they had beautiful wildflowers growing along the wall, Dietrich played chess with Jen on a board that was two squares too wide and used for some other popular game in France that we never could find the name of. The girls played something like hopscotch. A local fisherman caught a giant catfish. And, as at many stopping points, I was able to shoot candid shots with great gratitude for me 70 - 300 mm kit lens.


After lunch, we went to the the Musée de l'Orangerie, of which, though intriguing, I have little to say except that it was here I discovered that Emily has a deep interest in Picasso.


We then walked through the Champ de Mars towards the base of the Eiffel tower, where, after a stop for some ice cream, we embarked upon a boat tour on the Seine. The tour was interesting, but, even better, the boat was excellent for observing and photographing people along the banks and getting a quick overview of life along the Seine. (Most of these shots, along with the aforementioned, are in Parisians: Volume II).


After disembarking, we had a very nice simple dinner at a small restaurant nearby. I will say, nowhere in Europe was it a simple task to find seating for nine. A regular elderly patron seated near Nora slipped her a chocolate.


After seeing the kids to be, I went out for wandering the streets around our apartment again in the evening and started experimenting with some longer exposures, though I had left my tripod at home and had to work handheld and on makeshift stands.


Day 04 Reflections:


Reflection One -- In general, despite being an Art History teacher, I am not much of a museum person -- or at least not for very long. I love to study paintings and find illuminating new dimensions in single works of art when I view them. I love a small installation of a single artist’s work or of a time period. I love to have new questions opened up, and to begin to speculate as to answers.


But casual  museum going or the need to get through a museum in a rush tends to simply frustrate these aims. When I have thoroughly studied even one work of of art, or when I have given some attention to perhaps a few over the course of a couple hours, my artistic mind and spirit are full. There is simply no more space for serious contemplation, and I am left with the decision to either leave the museum or take a different approach to art than I care to take.


At the Musée d'Orsay, this point occurred just after the Degas piece and so the rest of the noted ‘intriguing paintings’ along with “Arrangement in Gray and Black No. 1” (more commonly known as “Whister’s Mother”), “Le déjeuner sur l'herbe,” all their Bouguereaus and even Nickolai Ge’s “Crucifixion” will have to wait until I return to Paris someday.


Reflection Two -- I was struck today by how different it must be to live in and amongst these buildings, buildings that are not just old, but were conceived of, developed, and built for a another time entirely, for a different way of life -- for a life of hearth fires and candlelight, a life of horses and stables, a life of goods that were handcrafted out of necessity not luxury. The stairs in our apartment are ancient by American standards, the wood hand-cut with a necessary sense for the particular space it occupies. Doors and doorways are not standardized, the buildings were not made to be wired for electricity, plumbing was an afterthought.


All of this contributes both to the sense of living history I mentioned yesterday, but perhaps also to the sadness of Paris. The electric wiring just doesn’t fit in. Home appliances are garishly out of place and violate the Medieval or Renaissance sense of space. The roads aren’t made for cars. Fluorescent lighting saps the warmth from the architecture. Any contemporary expectations for a certain kind of modern convenience simply couldn’t be met without razing everything and starting over (Baron Haussmann’s solution under Louis Napoleon). And who would ever do this to the Paris we now have?


So the city as I experienced it exists as a kind of twilight world -- an museum of a way of life that has all but vanished inhabited by a people who seem also to have a foot in both worlds.


Romano Guardini on the passing of the pre-technological world into the technological age Guardini in his Letters from Lake Como:


“A time that is sinking is always sad, but sorrow is especially profound for a life which is doomed to perish and which we feel belongs to us. With it the possibilities of living go under too.”

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Parisians: Volume II

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Best of Church Architecture

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Best of Abstracts

These are the best of my shots from Europe that are intended as abstracts or to highlight color, pattern, shape, focus or other dimensions of space and time. I know this is not everyone's cup of tea, but I find that when I shoot for these things I do see the world in a new way and discover aspects of reality I would not otherwise.

In shooting people this way (which I have not done a lot of before), I was struck by the connection between some of the results and the statues of Alberto Giacometti (as in this famous photograph of the artists and his work by Henri Cartier-Bresson.)

I am not a big post processor of my images, but do find it interesting in the case of abstract photography to play around with saturation and color more than I usually do.

The most radically altered images here are a result of inverting the colors. They also came from the most naturally non-representational photos. In one of the cases, you can see the transformation from original image, to inverted color, to black and white, to black and white inversion.

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Parisians: Volume I

One of my favorite things about being in a public space (be it a tourist area, downtown region, or the Great Minnesota Get Together) is the relative freedom to get candid shots of strangers. In an era of pose and polish, I love seeing the images that come out of scenarios like this. I treasure the various expressions, the clothes, the smiles and the surprising occasional direct eye contact. Sometimes I get several shots of one person that are each worth keeping.

Along with my blog posts and other “best of” albums from Europe, I’ll be sharing albums of the people and faces I encountered while on the trip. These are unvarnished people. A few of them are conventionally beautiful, many are not. Some seem to be having fun, some to be sad, others distant, some disturbed. Some are alone, some are in in groupings of various relationships.

But each one of these people has a story to tell and I would bet that many of their stories are very different than mine. I can honestly say that I would want to hear every one. Some of them are probably living run-of-the-mill lives, some are living immorally, others are saints and martyrs. Some are run down and left to the side, others are at the top. Still, who knows what sacrifice, tragedy, joy and ecstasy each has known?  It is a source of wonder to me that each of these people is bearing the image of God through their time here on earth with as rich and complicated an interior life of my own -- none to be laughed at or in any way despised.

Christ plays in ten thousand places,
Lovely in limbs, and lovely in eyes not his
To the Father through the features of men's faces.
G.M. Hopkins
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Day 03 - Paris: Hôpital Saint-Louis, Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris

Day Three - Paris: The Hôpital Saint-Louis and First Look at the Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris


Day three was a light, refreshing day.


As on many days we split up into different groups with different interests.


Jen and I walked with Dietrich, Nora and Charis to the Hôpital Saint-Louis in the morning, seeing a different Paris and feeling better and better about the entire city on the way. (A good night’s sleep probably did wonders, but the smell of pâtisserie after pâtisserie didn’t hurt either.) The Hôpital was founded in 1607 by Henry IV of France and was suggested as a destination by Google Now’s “Photos Nearby” card, which often took us to interesting locations that would not have been featured in any guidebook.


On the way, we encountered our first instance of “Love Locks” while crossing a canal bridge. Apparently, this is a blossoming European phenomenon. ‘Lovers’ write their names on a padlock, secure it to a bridge and throw the key into the water below. Delightfully, Jen spotted a lock with “M & M 2013” written on it, bringing to mind our newlywed Minnesota friends Matt and Mary Brickweg.


Not knowing anything about it before arriving, we were surprised to find that the Hôpital was still a working hospital.


One the way back, we stopped to have lunch on the Rue René Boulanger, Jen at a crêperie and the kids and I at a falafel shop next door.


After lunch, we walked south on the Rue Saint-Martin with the Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris in mind as a destination. Along the way, we stopped by a small children’s park, the Square Emile Chautemps (where Nora and Charis would have played the rest of the night away) and passed the Centre National d'Art et de Culture George Pompidou, the  Tour Saint-Jaques, and the Hôtel de Ville.


Circling around the Île de la Cité to make the best approach to Notre-Dame, we encountered the booksellers and their strange green bookcases along the quai, and the “Love Lock” tradition was on full golden display as we crossed the Pont de l'Archevêché.


On this first trip to Notre-Dame, I was most struck by two things. The first was the difficulty of getting a good shot of the cathedral itself. The second was the fascinating diversity of the gargoyles.


On the way home, we stopped by a little shop for some macarons. (I believe this was Jen’s first experience of the dessert, which came highly recommended by my sister Janine.) We also wandered through the surprising Jardin Anne Frank, the  first experience of my favorite part of Paris -- the public gardens.


Dinner and an early bedtime capped off a day that improved Paris by a long stretch.


Day 03 Reflections:


I don’t know why I suspected that, being over 400 years old, the Hôpital Saint-Louis would not be a working hospital, but this was a first instance of something I would mark throughout my time in France. The country is not and appears never to have been in a “move on” mode. Their history seems deeply embedded in their present -- at least in the parts of Paris where we spent most of our time. This was in sharp contrast to London -- again, at least the parts of the city where we were.


The experience of trying to photograph Notre-Dame raised interesting questions about photography, art and location that continued throughout the trip. There is no substitute in terms of experience for being present to a work of art. Space, time, surface, texture and many other aspects of physical reality are cheated by the image printed in a book or displayed on a screen. The artwork (or building, or square, or city) is reduced in significance, having been mastered by another human medium. This doesn’t mean I will stop photographing reality or stop looking at images, but it does raise interesting questions about the role of images in our understanding of reality and, for me, sounds a cautionary note.

My experiences and reflections on both of the above topics paralleled throughout the trip my reading of Catholic priest, professor and theologian Romano Guardini's Letters from Lake Como: Explorations in Technology and the Human Race, written in the early 20th century. I say ‘paralleled’ because, while neither determined the quality of the other, reading the book and experiencing Europe seemed to run together intellectually and spiritually.

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Day 01 and 02 -- Travel from Minneapolis to Paris via Reykjavik

Days One and Two - Travel from Minneapolis to Paris via Reykjavik

 We took off from Minneapolis International Airport on schedule at 4:00 pm and landed in Reykjavik in the early morning hours, time rapidly accelerating on the Eastward journey. Our flight from Reykjavik to Paris was delayed, allowing for a more leisurely pace through customs and a quick nap for some, then we were off by breakfast time on a plane full of choir boys from Philadelphia all wearing red blazers and grins ranging from the angelically excited to the mischievous. Icelandair proved to be a wonderful airline. The three younger kids each received complimentary meals and fun packs, the movie selection made it easy to keep the kids from getting squirrely, and I was introduced to Iceland through the delightfully strange indie film, Summerland.

Landing in Paris with five children, each faithfully toting their own suitcases and backpacks, we made our way through the Charles Charles de Gaulle Airport airport, by train to Gard du Nord (where Dietrich was able to get in a little Taxicab geometry), and treacherously by foot to our apartments on the Rue Buchardon and Passage du Marche -- the girls following Jen like a line of little ducks, Dietrich and I usually bringing up the rear, with Gramps leading the way and Grams following behind.

Honest First Impression of Paris: A sad city. A press and bustle of people, grime and rush. The stench of stale urine and grease.

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