Tour Paris
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In Search of 7, rue de Grenelle
By Cathy Fiorello
Last Updated ( Sunday, 06 December 2009 )Just when I felt my obsession with The Elegance of the Hedgehog subsiding, I found myself in Paris, in search of 7, rue de Grenelle, the hotel particuliere where the story takes place. Adding to my urgency to find that residence: en route to Paris I had read Gourmet Rhapsody, Muriel Barbery’s prequel to Hedgehog, which is set in the same place.
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Paris: Nine Years Later
By Cathy Fiorello
The year 2001 was not a good year for Americans. It was a double whammy for me. Just weeks before the terrorist attack, I was diagnosed with a serious illness. The recovery from both would be slow and painful.Adding to that pain, I had to cancel that year’s “Paris Fix.” It would be nine years before I saw that treasured city again. During that time, I moved from New York to San Francisco. I think San Francisco is part of the reason I stayed away from Paris so long. I now lived in the American Paris and could enjoy the wonders of these sister cities without enduring a thirteen-hour flight.
Last Updated ( Monday, 12 April 2010 ) -
Seeking the Immortal Nicolas Flamel in Paris
By Dennis Jacobs
Want to live forever? Nicolas Flamel did.
Last Updated ( Sunday, 15 November 2009 )
Yes, Nicolas Flamel of Harry Potter fame was a real person. Some believe he is a real person.
Flamel was born in 1330 in Paris or its immediate environs. He achieved success as a scrivener and book seller in Paris. He and his wife, Pernelle, spent their later years in a house at 51, rue de Montmorency. Built in 1407, the house is the oldest in Paris still standing. You can literally get a flavor for Nicolas Flamel’s home by dining in the restaurant that occupies the building’s ground floor, the Auberge Nicolas Flamel. -
Paris Quiz
By Jesse Kornbluth
Last Updated ( Friday, 16 October 2009 )
I’ve been to Paris a gazillion times, lived there for months, get around without a map. I not only have favorite restaurants, I have favorite dishes at them. I’m looking right now at a concert stub from a top-ten-ever Bruce Springsteen concert at the Bercy Arena. And, for an English major, I have read a shelf of French history and fiction. -
Madeleine Vionnet: “le couturier des couturiers”
By Rebecca Pekron
Last Updated ( Sunday, 15 November 2009 )
Didn’t make it to the Chanel runway for the unveiling of Lagerfeld’s prête-a-porter collection for the coming season? Or perhaps you did, and yet are still craving more. In either case, modistes will not want to miss the Madeleine Vionnet exhibit on display at the Musée des Arts Decoratifs, which features over one hundred of the French designer’s confections, predominantly from the 1920s and 30s. Contemporary designers including Issey Miyake, and before him, Christian Dior, cite Madeleine Vionnet as one of the most influential designers of the 20th Century, earning her the distinction of “le couturier des couturiers” in the fashion world. -
So they're putting a McDonald's underneath the Louvre
By Jesse Kornbluth
Last Updated ( Sunday, 11 October 2009 )
The Louvre is the planet's premier name in art. And the leader by a large measure --- the Louvre is home to 35,000 of the most precious objects collected from the back room of time to the 19th century. Its collection is housed in a building bigger than Donald Trump's ego. Nine million visitors a year stroll through its galleries. (In New York, the Metropolitan Museum of Art draws “only” 5.2 million.)Why did an institution that is the gold standard agree to host a McDonald's in the shopping plaza underneath its pyramid --- essentially, at its main entrance? -
Home Sweet Home in Montmartre
By Linda Donahue
Last Updated ( Friday, 25 September 2009 )
I fell in love with Montmartre in November 2007. Actually ... no, first I fell in love with an apartment in Montmartre in 2007. It was Thanksgiving Day and a friend of mine had been invited to a dinner soirée on rue Houdon. The festivities comprised of an intriguing mix of Americans and Parisians. I spent much of the evening chatting with Didier, a handsome French photographer. As engrossed as I was in flirting, I was also falling in love with Erica’s one-bedroom apartment. -
Great Day Trips From Paris
By Mary Ann Grisham
Last Updated ( Monday, 08 March 2010 )
deserve a short vacation from your vacation! Take advantage of Paris’ great public transportation system and venture out to see some of the glorious sights in the nearby countryside. I’m highlighting three of my favorite day trips from Paris for you to enjoy. You can do all three of these excursions using organized tour companies, but if you prefer to schedule your own day, and save some money, don’t be afraid to venture out on your own! Plus, all of these excursions will get back in time for dinner at your favorite Paris bistro. -
Chateaux for “Tax Farmers”& Kings
By Arnie Greenberg
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 22 September 2009 )
In 17th century France, the word ‘farmer’ had more elaborate definitions. Here, they referred to the people who farmed or collected taxes for the king. Furthermore, it has been suggested that many of these important people collected much more than they delivered to the crown. -
A Zero Budget Biennial: Isn’t that a Contradiction in Terms?
By Rebecca Pekron
Galleries Carlos Cardenas and schleicher + lange host the Zero Budget Biennial through October 3. The show, featuring 34 local and int
ernational artists, includes film, sculpture, painting, installation and performance pieces. Self described as “An amalgam of hyperbole and humility, bombast and intimacy, chest-beating outrage and methodical joy,” the Zero Budget Biennial (co-curated by Joanna Fiduccia and Chris Sharp) elegantly succeeds in challenging assumptions behind the biennial paradigm without spending a dime.
Last Updated ( Monday, 21 September 2009 )
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