Palazzo Medici-Riccardi, Firenze

Palazzo-Medici-Riccardi-ph.M.-Quattrone-

The palace of the De’ Medici Family has a troubled history.

When Filippo Brunelleschi presented his project of a palazzo to Cosimo De’ Medici, the latter considered it to be too fancy and gave up the idea.

Then came the draft by Michelozzo Michelozzo, Donatello’s pupil, but this time the Florentines said ‘No’ to what at the time must have seemed an urban mess in the San Lorenzo district.

Finally, the works began with the erection of the famous ashlar walls (with protruding stones), the small and narrow windows with grates, heavy doors, all aimed at intimidating everyone who passed or entered the building.

However, beyond the heavy door, the building takes on a much kinder style, with a courtyard that is a real open-air museum with sarcophagi, inscriptions and statues. 

picture71362250925577

In 1659, Gabbriello Riccardi, Marquis of Chianti, became the owner of Palazzo Medici and sold it to the Lorenas, the Grand Dukes of Tuscany, in 1814. After many renovations, it became the seat of the administrative offices and headquarters of the Interior Ministry, in the period when Florence was capital of Italy, between 1865 and 1870.

Since 1874, the Medici Palace is the seat of the Province of Florence and also a museum with works such as the Magi Chapel with frescoes by Benozzo Gozzoli.

Germany has the moral duty to return a painting to Florence, according to the Uffizi’s (German) director

Director of the Uffizi Galleries, Eike Schmidt, has kicked off the new year with an appeal: return a painting stolen from the Palazzo Pitti’s collections by Nazi soldiers, healing a 75-year-old wound that is not uncommon in the post-war art world.

Jan_van_Huysum_-_Vase_of_Flowers
During their retreat in 1944, Wehrmacht soldiers removed Vase of Flowers by Jan van Huysum, along with several other still-life masterpieces from the 17th and 18th centuries, from the Villa Bossi-Pucci, where it was transferred in 1943, having previously been on display in the Palatine Gallery since 1824.

The artwork was eventually brought to Germany, where it ended up in the hands of an unidentified family.

Though its whereabouts were unknown for decades, following reunification in 1991, several intermediaries came forward on behalf of the family to demand the Italian authorities pay to have the painting returned.

These attempts were unsuccessful and Florence’s district attorney’s office eventually concluded that the painting belongs to the Italian State, and so it cannot be bought.

“Germany must abolish its law regarding paintings stolen during the war,” says Schmidt, referring to the statute of limitations preventing prosecution for crimes committed more than 30 years ago, “and ensure that these works be returned to their rightful owners. Germany has a moral duty to return this work to our museum, and I hope that the German state will do so as soon as possible, along with every other work of art stolen by the Nazis.”

Underlining Schmidt’s plea is a black and white reproduction of the painting newly on display in the Sala dei Putti in Palazzo Pitti, alongside an Italian, English and German-language panel explaining that the work was stolen in 1944.

The article above is taken from http://www.theflorentine.net/news/2019/01/return-stolen-artwork-uffizi/?mc_cid=d17a9ccafa&mc_eid=2a398b6f2f

Rare footage of Monet, Degas, Renoir and Rodin

 

https://www.chonday.com/16575/moneartist3/?fbclid=IwAR27OVAReOLn6GK0flZfoAdTfGUKSleyWNM1rROkCs72vNhzEZleR0zIZ8E

 

Rare Film of Monet, Renoir, Rodin and Degas
Fine art enthusiasts will appreciate these fascinating 100-year-old film clips of four of the most celebrated artists in history; Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Auguste Rodin, and Edgar Degas. In 1915, with the newly innovated film camera, a young Russian-born, French actor named Sacha Guitry captured some of France’s greatest artists and authors.

Le Marais, Paris, partie un (1): Place des Vosges

Behold Le Marias!

Rue-des-Rosiers

 

This famous district began its life in the history of Paris as the home of the king and the capitol city’s many aristocrats.  Le Marais spreads across parts of the 3rd and 4th arrondissements in Paris, on the Rive Droite.

ym61

 

Today Le Marais is enjoying the latest of its many incarnations as the trendiest shopping district in Paris with the top stores in Rue des Francs-Bourgeois and Rue des Rosiers. The most famous stores are BHV Marais, Merci, and Uniqlo Le Marais.

From the 13th century forward, Le Marais was developed as the French nobility’s favorite place of residence. Things reached a crescendo in 1605 when King Henri IV of France built Place Royale (today called the Place des Vosges), and subsequently French nobles built their urban mansions, or hôtels particuliers, such as the Hôtel de Sens, the Hôtel de Sully, and the Hôtel de Beauvais, throughout the district, so they could be near the seat of power.

place-des-vosges-big

 

The Royal Square is also notable because it was the oldest planned square in Paris.  Comprised as a true square (140 m × 140 m), the Place embodied the first European program of royal city planning.

Vosges-panoramica

 

One of the many new aspects about the Place Royale in 1612 was that the house fronts were all built to the same design, probably by Jean Baptiste Androuet du Cerceau.

fullsizeoutput_acf

The facades are all composed of red brick with strips of stone quoins over vaulted arcades that stand on square pillars. The steeply-pitched blue slate roofs are pierced with discreet small-paned dormers above the pedimented dormers that stand upon the cornices.

 

 

fullsizeoutput_ad0

 

One section of the square’s 4 long vaulted arcades:

fullsizeoutput_ac1

 

This section of the arcade is the home to this small but fine art gallery:

fullsizeoutput_abf

 

This section of the arcade is also home to one of the city’s most exclusive restaurants. Our guide told us that Michelle and Barack Obama were taken here during their state visit. He promised us that they won’t let Trump come there…just checking to see that you are still reading my text!

fullsizeoutput_ac4fullsizeoutput_ac5

Le Marais is the closest you will get to the feel of medieval Paris and has more pre-revolutionary buildings and streets left intact than any other area in Paris. A glance at some of the beautiful buildings and houses indicates the wealthy status of the former residents. After the French Revolution, much of the area was abandoned by the rich, and poor bohemian types moved in.  You should keep in mind that before Napoleon showed up the Marais is what most of Paris looked like— a labyrinth of cobblestone alleys.

The rest of Paris was razed by Napoleon and Haussman who wanted to build huge avenues and gigantic squares such as the Place Concorde. These are now the glory of Paris, but they were originally conceived so that armies and artillery could be moved around the city to keep the poor in check and defeat invaders.

On a more metaphysical level, the purpose of such broad space is to make the citizen feel small and powerless when faced with the giant civic machine of government, or an obedient army. In the Marais we are privy to the small and approachable Paris of the past, the place to wander in maddening circles and never find your way, the place to hole up and read Sartre or Camus in a café window or watch the Parisian life go by.

The Marais is also the most famous Jewish quarter in Paris and in much of Europe, still maintaining strong traditions.

The area was considered so squalid at this point it was nearly destroyed by city officials who wanted to modernize Paris. (A huge avenue cutting through the center of the Marais was only avoided by the start of WWI.) Fortunately, Le Marais was one of the first areas in Paris to establish very strict preservation laws. Beginning in the 1960’s, efforts have been made to restore and preserve the façades of historically important (in the case of The Hotel Albert for instance) and typically Parisian (in the case of charming early 20th-century boulangeries for instance). That’s why in this neighborhood, you’ll see bars with Boulangerie signs and a Nike store that looks like a bookstore from the outside.

 

.

 

 

Jardin des Tuileries

The Jardin des Tuileries, aka, the Tuileries Garden is a great civic garden located between the Louvre and the Place de la Concorde in the 1st arrondissement of Paris. Created by Catherine de’ Medici as the garden of the Tuileries Palace in 1564, it was eventually opened to the public in 1667 and became a public park after the French Revolution. From the 19th century moving forward, the Tuileries is a place where Parisians celebrate, meet, stroll and relax.  I spent the afternoon there recently.

 

 

fullsizeoutput_8d2

 

fullsizeoutput_8d3

 

IMG_4440

 

fullsizeoutput_8d7

 

fullsizeoutput_8d8

 

fullsizeoutput_8da

IMG_4424IMG_4423IMG_4422

IMG_4419IMG_4420

 

 

You’re just too good to be true, can’t take my eyes off of you

Paris.  Do I really need to say anything more?

fullsizeoutput_a07

My feet were not on the ground today; I spent part of the afternoon walking at rooftop level, admiring the view.  It was almost sunny, very cold, and pretty near perfect.

And then, there it is; the iconic tower.  That tower simply cannot take a bad picture!

fullsizeoutput_a06

 

I think the traces of jet airplanes makes the sky more interesting.  I must admit, I can’t help comparing France with Italy.  In Italy, the blue skies are usually filled with the most interesting cumulus clouds.  I never tire of that sky.  France is different.  The clouds are more diffused.

fullsizeoutput_a05

 

It becomes an addiction, trying to capture the tower in a photograph:

fullsizeoutput_a03

 

fullsizeoutput_a02

 

fullsizeoutput_a00

 

fullsizeoutput_9fe

 

So, finally, I must turn away.  Other parts of the Parisian skyline are beautiful too:

fullsizeoutput_9fc

 

fullsizeoutput_9fa

 

And, even looking down, from the fancy perch I was on, is also interesting:

fullsizeoutput_9f9

 

fullsizeoutput_9f8The perch itself is gorgeous!

 

fullsizeoutput_9f7

 

 

Far away is the mighty Sacré-Cœur; the misty atmosphere hiding its outlines.

fullsizeoutput_9f4

 

And the Paris Opera house is nearby.  So interesting to see it from on high and not ground level.  A temple (to the arts) in the sky.

fullsizeoutput_9f2

 

fullsizeoutput_9f1

 

 

But then, like a magnet, my vision is drawn back to it:

fullsizeoutput_9f0

 

fullsizeoutput_9ef

 

I look away:

fullsizeoutput_9ee

 

fullsizeoutput_9ec

 

fullsizeoutput_9eb

 

fullsizeoutput_9e8

 

But go back:

fullsizeoutput_9e6fullsizeoutput_9e4

You’re just too good to be true, can’t take my eyes off of you.

Christmas Day, Champs-Élysées, Paris. 2018

Christmas afternoon on the Champs-Élysées. Sunny and chilly.  Perfect winter day in the perfect city!

 

 

 

Random things that struck me, found on the Champs-Élysées:

fullsizeoutput_8e1

 

fullsizeoutput_8e0

 

fullsizeoutput_8dd

 

 

IMG_4414

 

One of the most charming aspects of Christmas in Paris to me is all the hand-painted decorations on the store windows.  Some are really graphic and cool like this one:

fullsizeoutput_8cf

IMG_4446

 

But more of them are really sweet and old-fashioned, like the next bunch:

fullsizeoutput_8cefullsizeoutput_8ccfullsizeoutput_8cbIMG_4451fullsizeoutput_8c9fullsizeoutput_8c8

fullsizeoutput_8c1

fullsizeoutput_8c0

fullsizeoutput_8bf

 

Okay, back to the fun holiday decorations and great architecture of the Champs-Élysées:

fullsizeoutput_9b3

 

fullsizeoutput_9af

 

fullsizeoutput_98f

 

fullsizeoutput_98e

 

fullsizeoutput_98d

 

fullsizeoutput_98c

 

fullsizeoutput_95b

 

fullsizeoutput_944

 

fullsizeoutput_930

 

 

fullsizeoutput_8d1

 

The next set of pictures are of what is to me the most beautiful building on the Champs-Élysées.

fullsizeoutput_95d

 

fullsizeoutput_95e

 

fullsizeoutput_95f

 

fullsizeoutput_961

 

fullsizeoutput_962

 

fullsizeoutput_964

 

fullsizeoutput_966

 

fullsizeoutput_967

 

fullsizeoutput_969

 

fullsizeoutput_96a

 

fullsizeoutput_96b

 

fullsizeoutput_974

 

Other striking aspects of the Champs-Élysées:

fullsizeoutput_97e

 

fullsizeoutput_989

 

fullsizeoutput_98a

 

And, finally, I’ll close this post because this is already so long.  But, before I do, pictures of some of the cool advertising I saw in the subway on my way to the Champs-Élysées:

fullsizeoutput_9b6fullsizeoutput_9b9fullsizeoutput_9bb

Oh, and P.S.: here’s a very cool old picture of the layout of this area from the point of view of the Arc de Triomphe.  The Eiffel Tower hadn’t even been dreamed of yet!

Av_des_Ch_Elysées_au_XIXe_Felix_Benoist

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Randomly keeping up in Paris

Just trying to keep up with posting all the amazing things I’m seeing here in Paris!

 

fullsizeoutput_86e

 

fullsizeoutput_86c

 

While most of us are familiar with the iconic Parisian art nouveau metro appearance, like this:

fullsizeoutput_857

 

A more modern take is this:

fullsizeoutput_860

 

fullsizeoutput_85c

Very cool, no?

 

What movie are the French going to see?  Just like the rest of the world, they want to see the film about the life of Freddie Mercury and Queen:

IMG_4028

 

Parisian architecture is still fabulous:

fullsizeoutput_89e

 

fullsizeoutput_89c

 

And walking not far from the opera, I noticed this inscription on a plaque:

IMG_4031

In English the inscription reads: “here fell for the liberation Guillois Michel Peacekeeper 20 August 1944”.

Knowing only that the Liberation of Paris took place between August 19-25, 1944, I searched Google for info on this patriot.  You can read about him and the liberation here:https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=fr&u=http://liberation-de-paris.gilles-primout.fr/michel-guillois-annonce-la-treve&prev=search.

 

Wherever in the world I am lucky enough to travel, I am always entertained by the fact that there will be references in that place to other places.  How many people would love to be in Paris?  Millions I am sure!  But here in Paris, an exhibition is devoted to Venice! When in Venice, there will be references to other places as well.  It goes on and on, ever thus!

fullsizeoutput_86a

 

And no matter how many illustrious persons lived in France throughout history, what entertains the French now, apparently, is a look back at Michael Jackson!!  An exhibition about Michael Jackson at the Grand Palais!  Never thought I’d live to see the day…

 

fullsizeoutput_869

 

Anyone reading this post in December of 2018 will know that Paris has been in turmoil with the protests of the so-called gilets jaunes, and as a matter of fact I thought about canceling my long-planned trip to this city because the news coming out of Paris was so dire.  Paris has calmed down the past week or so and I was amused in front of Notre Dame to see that the French gendarmes are a lot like the Italian carabinieri, they tend to congregate to chat and check their cells.  I doubt that was what authorities intended.

fullsizeoutput_897