So I have finally, months and months after the adventure, uploaded all my Paris photographs to Flickr. Check it out!
I thought, since I won’t be able to blog each day, that I could summarize here for those who are interested my posts generated from the adventure, although with some stray photographs. Hope it gives at least a glimpse into the traveling.
I’m already hungry for more travel… but where to next?
Musée des Arts Forains (Museum of Carnival Arts)
Robert’s fantastic phantasmagoria
Soleil Froid (Cold Sun) at the Palais de Tokyo
Hélica: the car that dreamed it was an airplane at the Musée des arts et métiers
Arno Kramer at the Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature
Marcel Breuer retrospective at the Cité de l’Architecture et du Patrimoine
Grave of the Marquis de Lafayette
Eileen Gray exhibition at the Pompidou
Alabaster Mourners of John the Fearless at the Musée de Cluny
The street art of Fred le Chevalier
The balloonists of Pere Lachaise
L’Ange du Bizarre (The Angel of the Odd) at the Musée d’Orsay
The Healing Saints and the Medicine of the Divine at the Museum of the History of Medicine
The Musée Fragonard and the “History and Cultural Representations of Human Remains” conference series at the Academy of Medicine, & a Notes from the Field
Johann Rivat’s paintings in Galerie Metropolis
Jan Fabre at Galerie Daniel Templon
And those are the stories you can get from two weeks in Paris! An argument for more travel if I have ever seen one.
Thank you for the wonderful photos from Showmen’s Rest in Hugo. I worked out of Hugo, OK from 1961-1967 as a “circus boy” on a no. of shows. I knew many of those folks whose headstones were shown, and a tear welled up as I viewed the images. Retired now in Phoenix, AZ, I have many happy memories of my years under canvas, and with indoor shows. There is nothing else like it, and I often miss the fun and excitement of “show biz.” Thanks, again, Ed