Wednesday 29 April 2009

The World of Andy Warhol in Paris

No sight of the infamous Condensed Campbells Soup work of art at the Andy Warhol exhibition (Grand Palais)– it rests at the MOMA (New York). I hadn't realised that pop art pioneer Andy Warhol had gained so much fame (and fortune) during his lifetime...in fact he called himself a commercial artist, painted for money which of course increased his exclusivity factor. Having worked in journalism, fashion and music industry he became very well connected in the upper echelons of society. Turning his passion into a business, proving his extraordinary talent and not afraid of being `different' can only be admired. I was intrigued by the vibrancy of the bold and often clashing colors used to enhance certain features of the face, simple and striking. Seeing so many different heads in a few rooms was a bit overwhelming for the brain, especially once you begin to spot the celebrities (Deborah harry, Stallone, Diane Von Furstenberg...) and mentally morph them into what they look like today. We leave the exhibit through a corridor pasted with his apparently other 'well known' piece of art, the 'Cow print wallpaper' (photo).

Exhibition at the Grand Palais until July 13th, 2009 – not to be missed!






Friday 24 April 2009

David LaChapelle - Edgy, Wicked Modern Art


I finally made it to the David LaChapelle exhibition at the Monnaie de Paris. What an artist! I learned of the ultra-unique photographer/artist through the friend who I went with and then realised from my web searches that I recognised a few of the pieces that had made the headlines such as the one where glitzy dressed Paris Hilton is being 'gently' held by 2 cops (Hi Bitch, Bye Bitch – see photo). My first impressions from scanning his works on the web were; shocking, controversy, taboo....and then after further reflection, ironic, clever and even beautiful. These same impressions carried over to the museum during my visit but I was triggered with a lot more emotional charge and my eyes were hungry for more. David LaChapelle – obviously expression through art is what he does well depicting controversial, decadent, materialist pop culture in the lives of both celebrities and the ordinary. The only shortfall was that there was only a small selection of his works at the exhibit.
Look out for my next Art visit...coming soon....

Wednesday 22 April 2009

The French shuts down 'The Body' exhibition in Paris


French law has clamped down on this famous Body exhibition which has traveled the 4 corners of the world - I went to the one in London, twice in fact about 5 years ago and have seen it pass through Montreal and New York....so what is the problem? Yes I have to admit that I was a bit nervous about what my reactions would be before entering for the first time, but all in all it was educational and presented in an 'art gallery' format. I could not believe that Human rights groups claimed that the show denigrates the human body....and believe me the majority of the comments made on lemonde's article was pro the closure. I thinks it's a total shame, and apparently so do these people in the photo who are obviously going to be the last few to catch this show before the organisers get a hefty fine. Photo taken around midday on my way from my French lesson at Madeline.

I wonder what will be next to bite the dust!

Monday 13 April 2009

Chocolate Art at Easter Time



This was the display of our favourite (at least mine) in our area yesterday(Easter Sunday)....see the beautiful chocolate? that was probably merely 1/3 of what they had left over. I should have taken a shot to the right past the entrance to show the 50+ people queue. So observation 1 - Parisians will walk a few blocks out in search of their local favourite 'pattiserie' and bakery...and I now understand why since I am doing it too. The quality of the baguette, cakes can be so much more refined than your nearest joint. 2nd observation...you think us British had the monopoly on Easter bunnies....come to France! For a couple of weeks now many of the 'pattiseries' have been displaying their works of chocolate art carefully wrapped in plastic film in preparation for the Easter weekend in the form of bells, chickens, rabbits, fish...and compilations of farmyard animals in their own chocolate pen...endless creativity.

Needless to say that I won't be touching chocolate with a barge pole for a while.

Happy Easter!


Thursday 2 April 2009

Public sanitation, more demonstrations and a swim...

Okay I know i've been slacking....but i've been gathering up some interesting tid bits to share with you.

I thought as my parents did that Paris (at least the streets around us) had a problem with it's street drainage system as we would often witness water gushing against the pavement and street as if there were a burst pipe somewhere. So after a few weeks I decided to ask Xavier why the local town hall isn't doing anything to fix these leaks to which he responded that nothing was broken. In fact it is their cleaning system, and since then I have noticed people dressed up in bright green outfits (usually in the morning) sweeping debris and bits of rubbish like cigarette butts and receipts into the sides into the gushing water....probably ending up in some dump? Of course to minimize larger pieces of debris getting stuck in some drain, there are also these bright green mini cars with 2 huge revolving brushes at the front, operated by another brightly green dressed person, skating along the pavements at various times during the day swallowing the bigger bits of unwanted filth. And if that wasn't enough the Mayor of Paris has recently launched an ad campaign to warn people of a 'new' fining scheme for people caught dumping in the streets from leaving unwanted household goods on the street to not picking up after your dog. There is a quite a shock factor to the ads i.e. on on you see a pile of dog litter on a beautiful sandy beach with the slogan 'Disgusting, also in Paris' To be honest I'm not sure how effective it has been - I'm still having to adjust my walking path to avoid random dog litter.

So yet another train of demonstrations are occurring whether it is against job losses owed to underperformance in these tight times or reduced funding for universities. But the question of why we are only seeing demonstrations at such publicly grand scale only in France and not every other recession affected country is interesting. Apparently in a country where the State is involved in many levels of the society and why the taxes are high as a result, the people expect a quick and painless solution...and they make sure that their message is clear to the State – it`s almost a right to demonstrate. In a poll running up to the General Day of Action there was around 67% support for the demonstrations, even people who didn't take a day off to strike (because they had to work?) were in favor of the strike. But things can get a bit over the top too, last week employees of 3M shut the Director of Manufacturing in his office overnight following the announcement of 110 employees being laid off this year. Released unharmed, but unrelentless in their ambition to negotiate a better severance deal on departure....more talks to follow. And closer to home a couple of weeks ago, one night we heard echoes of screams and shouts outside our building getting louder and louder around 11:30pm. We peeked out from behind our curtains to see what the calamity was about, it seemed like a hundred or so students had gathered for more than a quiet stroll around our neighbourhood and along the way, shouting slogans of some form, and tipping over the bottle bank on the street. They moved on but not the images of these irritated students. Apparently, the students strikes started back in November last year due to cuts in fundings for many universities and reforms in programs and soon leading to job losses for researchers. All the while students aren't attending classes but at least they are grooming themselves in politics.

And a little gem of the day....I finally dived into the Josephine Baker pool today (pool on the Seine) – it was pretty awesome to see the regular Seine lapping its waves against the glass walls, beneath the sun piercing through the glass rooftop!

Stay positive!