
In what other city can you be transported to the mystic heights  of Russian art before Peter the Great after having actually seriously  considered that shoe in light blue in the middle?  Ah, Paris!  Mamie and  I had a glorious day in Paris, France - never mind the 50degree  Farenheit weather.  This city is, as we know, utterly inexhaustible.   For various good reasons (I was a student, then I was a graduate  student, then I was with students) I've never been to Galleries  Lafayette.  Woo-ha!

Glorious, isn't it?  There's a Zola short story about a sales  girl (is it?) at the Samaritaine (is it?) (forgive me, Mac!) that Mac  teaches in his "Paris and Berlin" course that I really, really want to  read now.  It's all glitter and light and the fantastic in there. And  crowded, and the furtive look for that special something, and the  inevitable existentialism (what's all this sopping for?) replaced by the  thrill of conquest.  For me, it was a red raincoat (which will make an  appearance later) - for Mamie, her favorite perfume and an adorable  Paris t-shirt.

I invite you to peruse the 
fantastic web site of the Louvre  "Sainte Russie" exhibition.  The two gentlemen you see on the first page of the site are saints Boris and Gleb, my new best buds (and the inspiration for the title of the post). The curator is none other than Jannic  Durand, who, thanks to the great auspices of the Ilene Forsyth Speaker  Series from ICMA, came to DePauw.  Seeing unfathomably precious and  well-preserved works of art in every medium imaginable (from animal horn  to silk to parchment to gold) from over 600 years of Russian art  surrounded by hundreds of people in these splendid rooms at the Louvre, I  could hardly believe that the man responsible for all this had actually  been to DePauw. But he had (and gave a great talk on relics and  reliquaries, too). This show had it all: scope, history, objects you  loved for their stories, objects you loved for their materiality, great  beauty, great mystery.  The goal was to reveal the dynamic of Russian  art, as it absorbed and played with both the Scandinavian influences of  its geography and the Byzantime influences of its choice of religion.   It. Was. Splendid.  Here, Mamie and I took a break before heading off to  make a pilgrimage to Rembrandt's 
Bathsheba - still one of the most  breathtaking and poignant works of art ever (the letter she holds is  from King David, bidding her to come - how can she refuse the king? how  can she betray the husband she loves?

The Louvre Pyramid disgorged us back onto the entrance grounds  where we were buffeted by insane winds - good thing for a bus, then a  walk down Boulevard Saint-Germain then, ah, the hotel, where we reveled  in our day and new apparel. Hee hee.

Dinner was exquisite: a 1906 brasserie called 
Bouillon Racine.  No we did not have reservations, but yes they were very nice to us and  we ate risotto and fish and ended with a crème brûlée (Mamie) and  sorbets (me).  Paris is a world apart - Brittany seems like another  land, another era (one I miss dearly already - good thing I'm heading back Thursday, eh, kids?).  I think what fascinates me most is how Paris leaves  you wanting more. No matter how exhausted you are, there's one more  corner, one more restaurant, one more show that you're curious about.   So we're doing something we've never done before: we booked tickets for a  performance of Molière's 
Les femmes savantes for tomorrow night. !!!!! A bondafide French  théâtre performance!!!!  Vive Paris!
 
Ooh-la-la!...you both look absolutely gorgeous!...love, love, loving that red raincoat! I think I might even have a wee case of slicker envy! You two are definitely doing Paris up right! Can't wait to hear all about the show and the rest of your adventures. Hugs and kisses to you and your sweet mom, and hi, of course, to those dear souls holding down the fort in Brittany.xox~a
ReplyDeleteHee hee - soon soon it'll be you and me and Mals, dear friend!
ReplyDeleteVive la everything!
anne