(by On dirait le Sud…)
(by On dirait le Sud…)
Vendee, France (by bestfor / richard)
Water World (by Annie in Beziers)
Morning in Montmartre, Paris (by Irina_C)
This looks familiar enough that I can’t help wondering if I’ve been there. Last time I was in Paris, our hotel was in Montmartre. <3
Thirty years ago, in the dead of night, a group of six Parisian teenagers pulled off what would prove to be a fateful theft. Lifting a grate from the street, they descended a ladder to a tunnel, an unlit concrete passageway carrying a cable off into the void. They followed the cable to its source: the basement of the ministry of telecommunications. Horizontal bars blocked their way, but the skinny teens all managed to wedge themselves through and ascend to the building’s ground floor. There they found three key rings in the security office and a logbook indicating that the guards were on their rounds.
But the guards were nowhere to be seen. The six interlopers combed the building for hours, encountering no one, until they found what they were looking for at the bottom of a desk drawer—maps of the ministry’s citywide network of tunnels. They took one copy of each map, then returned the keys to the security office. Heaving the ministry’s grand front door ajar, they peeked outside; no police, no passersby, no problem. They exited onto the empty Avenue de Ségur and walked home as the sun rose.
This stealthy undertaking was not an act of robbery or espionage but rather a crucial operation in what would become an association called UX, for “Urban eXperiment.” UX is sort of like an artist’s collective, but far from being avant-garde—confronting audiences by pushing the boundaries of the new—its only audience is itself. More surprising still, its work is often radically conservative, intemperate in its devotion to the old. Through meticulous infiltration, UX members have carried out shocking acts of cultural preservation and repair, with an ethos of “restoring those invisible parts of our patrimony that the government has abandoned or doesn’t have the means to maintain.” The group claims to have conducted 15 such covert restorations, often in centuries-old spaces, all over Paris.
UX’s most sensational caper (to be revealed so far, at least) was completed in 2006. A cadre spent months infiltrating the Pantheon, the grand structure in Paris that houses the remains of France’s most cherished citizens. Eight restorers built their own secret workshop in a storeroom, which they wired for electricity and Internet access and outfitted with armchairs, tools, a fridge, and a hot plate. During the course of a year, they painstakingly restored the Pantheon’s 19th-century clock, which had not chimed since the 1960s.
More than 30 years after it was stolen from a French museum, Camille Pissarro’s “Le Marche aux Poissons” (“The Fish Market”) was handed over to the French ambassador by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Wednesday.
The roughly greeting-card-size work is a color monotype, a one-of-a-kind print made by painting on glass and then transferring the wet paint to a piece of paper.
Wednesday’s return was staged in a hall of a Washington museum filled with other French impressionist works, including some by artists who were inspired by Pissarro.
The customs bureau said that since 2007 it has returned more than 2,500 items to more than 22 countries.
(by Olivier DUVAL)
The Hall of Mirrors, Versailles
(by Gersyko’s)
Aquitaine, France
(by camil tulcan)
Déferlante II (by Sebastien B’)
Descendants of Oscar Wilde recently decided to have his immense gravestone cleansed of a vast accumulation of lipstick markings from kisses left by admirers, who for years have been defacing, and some say eroding, the memorial in hilly Père Lachaise Cemetery. But the decision meant not only cleaning the stone, a flying nude angel by the sculptor Jacob Epstein, who was inspired by the British Museum’s Assyrian figures, but also erecting a seven-foot plate glass wall to keep ardent admirers at a distance.
Left: Amber Luallen, an American visiting Paris, kissed the glass barrier around Oscar Wilde’s tomb at the Père Lachaise Cemetery. (Photo: Tomas van Houtryve for The New York Times)
Right: The tomb in 2009 (photo by me).
(Source: The New York Times)
Champs Elysées Christmas (by Aghear)