I was searching for a picture yesterday and was surprised to find how many photos I have completely overlooked in my files because they are from Paris versus Africa. These pictures, now months old, seem new and undiscovered. I sat down with them on this cold rainy day and looked to see if there might be a few I could share.
I remember shooting this picture for a couple of reasons. I loved the man's arm crocked at his elbow (so continental!) and I loved the woman's shoes. I spied those heels from across the street and immediately had shoe envy since I was walking in oh-so-practical
athletic shoes. I also liked the light....it was blue... just like in this picture....a consequence of walking down a narrow street with tall
venerable old buildings casting gray shadows which reflected the overcast sky.
Here's another photo that surprised me. I took it in the Rodin Museum. I remember passing by it without much thought.... then retraced my steps. "It looks like a Van
Gogh," I said to myself but it seemed so ordinary....no glass to protect it....no huge lumbering
guards next to it...not even a spot light..instead it just occupied space quietly....as if it was confident that eventually it would dawn on you that it was a Van
Gogh....and you would rush back....to adore it. Which is exactly what I did.....
The picture is titled "Portrait of
Pere Tanguy" and it has a curious
Japanese background.
Pere Tanguy owned a paint shop in Paris and apparently was immortalized because he made generous advances of supplies to Van
Gogh and other unknowns such as Toulouse-
Lautrec and
Signac. Van
Gogh, during this period, had purchased over 400
Japanese woodcuts which he exhibited in small cafes and studied. He felt their clean lines and their effortless style had something to teach him and some critics feel they helped him break away from Western convention. Van
Gogh's painting room had many of these woodcuts pinned to the wall....which is why they appeared in this portrait.
I found 6-7 other pictures from my Paris trip that I thought were interesting...a chocolate shop, a little itty bitty smart car, the Eiffel Tower...and ohhhhh a wonderful food picture from Montremarte. Instead of clumping them here out of context....I decided to post them in my Paris entries in August/September of 06. So please scroll down (a one second scroll) and have a peek at them.
The one I have absolutely fallen in love with is titled.."Window Shopping in Paris." It's wonderful and quiet.