

Umbrellas out we rushed into the covered entry, but by the time we had our tickets purchased it had stopped and the sun shown. As I mentioned earlier the Plans-Reliefs is located in the attic of one building 5 floors up and on a hot day is an unbearable oven, so today was almost ideal. It was still pretty warm up there but we were able to see the exhibits in relative comfort.



After lunch we walked the several blocks from Invalides over to the Orangerie, in another small short downpour, to see the small museum there. It contains Monet's large water-lily paintings and a good small smattering of impressionist and post-impressionist paintings. Its small but would be the crowning jewel for any museum in the U.S. There was a large line outside and with my museum card we could only get two of us into the museum without having to stand in line so Deb opted to wait outside while Jim and I went in. Jim and I had a nice discussion of the water-lilies paintings and then went downstairs to see the other paintings. Jim professed great admiration for an Andre Derain portrait of Madame Guillaume, the wife of Paul Guillaume who amassed the collection in the early part of the 20th century.

We took the bus back to the apartment and as we got off were seriously rained on for about 10 minutes to the point of having to shelter under an awning for several minutes before we got home. Jim was amused at the carnival of life occurring on the bus, a somewhat disturbed man got on to the packed bus with 3 large rolling bags and promptly got into arguments with several people including a nursing mother. It escalated to the point that the driver had to stop, get out, and come to the back door to tell the man to settle down or be put off. Jim wanted keep riding past our stop to see how it turned out, especially with the rain pelting down but we got off anyway.
Luckily, if there's one thing you guys have a lot of, it's umbrellas. :)
ReplyDeleteWell even the ones we had that cost more than 2.50 euros have been biting the dust and we'll have to get new ones pretty soon. (~8
ReplyDeleteI guess you'll need to discover the Parisian equivalent of Family Dollar. :)
ReplyDelete