Monday, December 1, 2008

Paris Holds the Key to Your Heart

Paris was an experience of epic proportion. We basically had five days with only two scheduled excursions with the group. The rest of the time was left up to us to navigate ourselves through the beautiful city with just a metro map and a few basic French phrases to get us by. Our professors basically dumped us on the streets of this huge, foreign city, and said, "Okay kids, go have fun!" Short on time, direction, and French vocabulary, we were what the French would call "l'incompétent." Still, we spent those five days to the fullest-- cathedrals, museums, monuments, shopping, FOOD. Paris had us going and going and going non-stop! The result was extreme exhaustion, but it was very satisfying. Paris is such amazing city. The beauty, the food, the art, history, the friendly Parisians-- Paris has got it going on.

On the bus in Paris.

In Chartes Cathedral.
Malcolm Miller-- the incredible Chartes scholar who gave our tour. A very learned man.
Miller explained a lot of the symbolism of the stained glass to us-- very cool.
Chartes Cathedral.
Draggin our western talks down thousand year old blocks...
!
And Chartes again at night... sorry these are out of order.

The town of Chartes at sunset. Charming little place.

The Hall of Mirrors in Versailles.
The art of Jeff Koons, an American contemporary artist, was on display at Versailles. This his porcelain sculpture of Michael Jackson and his monkey "Bubbles." It seemed a little out of place in a Baroque palace, but I found it very amusing. Apparently, the French really love Koons' art.
Versailles-- home of Louis XIV, the "sun king."

Bonjour!!
Notre Dame
The Grounds at Versailles. 
I don't know.

Us staring at Jeff Koons art.


Lauren is a hunchback!!
Transcendent gelato.



More Notre Dame. I was singing "God help the outcasts" constantly, and was surprised to find that I somehow knew all the words even though I never watched The Hunchback of Notre Dame when I was a kid. Thank you high school talent shows.




The Louvre
SO. BIG.

The pantheon.
World-weary friends.
Arc de Triomphe 

The grounds at Musee Rodin
On top of the Arc de Triomphe
Musee D'orsay was incredible! I saw these...






Alison Lost and Found her credit card at the Louvre. Thank you, honest people in Paris.



Monet's "Water Lilies"
This is basically the celestial room of art.

so many stairs to get to the top of the arc!! I went a second time with alison, and huffed and puffed all the way up!

you know who.
We found an abandoned carousel in a park.

Ghost Carousel.

The Seine River

A cute market street that I cannot remember the name of. This is where we had the most amazing crepes ever!
Modern art cave of wonders.

The Pompidou-- modern art mecca.
The gorgeous stained glass of Saint Chappelle

Shakespeare & Co.
Cutest book store ever. It is an english book store/dormitory for travelers who earn their stay by working at the store a few hours each day. The original store used to be a meeting place for the literary elite-- Joyce, Hemingway, Fitzgerald, etc. Loved this place.


One of the last things we did in Paris was indulge ourselves with French desserts. oh la la!


Au revoir, Paris!

7 comments:

Jake Garn said...

Holli, These pics are so legit. I love the Ghost Carousel picture. It looks kinda freaky.

Afton LeSueur said...

wow, tons of pictures! here is what i want to know: are you ever coming home?

Tricia said...

INCREDIBLE!!! I can't wait to hear all your experiences in person and see all the pictures. We'll have to get them all printed and make a "Holli's semester in London" scrapbook. Oh and I love the reference to Home Alone- incompetent!

Tricia said...

Um...I got on your blog again because I love it. It is definitely a bright spot in life! The french outfit you are wearing is AMAZING! I really think you are the most creative person I know.

Tricia said...

I'm stalking your blog...I just read your comment on TJs blog...okay I can understand the twilight thing, but you're not going to read Harry Potter really? Okay, I confess I was totally not into the trend, but I started reading them and fell in love. You need to read it just for the fact of appreciating such a talented author-not in the sense of a literary work, but she is the best storyteller. We'll talk at Christmas.

I'm definitely excited to hear TJs thoughts on Twilight....that'll be entertaining for sure. You would have a good time imitating the great scenes from the movie as well!

Anonymous said...

AHHHHHHHHH! I LOVE IT! i'm so glad you had an amazing time. let's go back someday together.

p.s. malcolm miller totally gave our tour too!

Helen said...

I like your pictures.some are really good! and blog too