PARIS
Two knock-out museums, one small and one massive
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You may recognize the Romantic artist Eugène Delacroix's most famous painting, Liberty Leading the People (below, of course). His work would later influence many French impressionists. He traveled a lot and owned several homes in France. His last apartment, where he lived from 1857 to his death in 1863, became a museum that the Louvre operates today. It is around the corner from where I am staying. So today I wandered over there.
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Terracotta colored painted bust by Antoine Étex ![]() |
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The garden |
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His painting studio |
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Delacroix, L'Annuciation, 1841 |
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One of Delacroix's palettes. It was very tidy. |
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The guard looked for all the world like Nathan Lane. He fell asleep. *** |
In the afternoon, I walked to the Musée d'Orsay. If you don't mind, I will skip the artwork attributions. I'm dead tired, and many of these are so well-known. It was exhilarating to see everything that I could. It would take several days to get through the entire collection.
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An inadvertent selfie with Degas' La Petite Danseuse de quatorze ans. |
RANDOM SHOTS OF THE DAY:
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I liked the look of the plaster falling off the side of a building. |
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Spring is here. |
Tomorrow is my last full day in Paris. I am not going to go to a museum.
Instead, I'm going SHOPPING!
Will you go to Van Gogh Museum on your return to Amsterdam? Judi
ReplyDeleteYou missed my blog entry. I went on March 12. It was terrific.
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