12.02.2007
12.01.2007
11.25.2007
Sweet hunter
Black Pants is a very sweet cuddly baby. We take catnaps together with her in my arm. And when she is being a little brat, singing to her calms her down and put her to sleep.
BP changes her face completely when I take out the cat teaser. The feathers totally drive her nuts. A few times she even breaks loose some from biting too hard. We all agree that BP would make a great killer out there. Birdies, be aware!
11.17.2007
Black Pants
Recently, I got a baby girl from the shelter when she was 1.5 month old.
We named her Black Pants because she wears one from behind although she has many other physical characteristics to name after, like the three black spots on her nose or her long crooked-tip tail.
BP is a quiet observer and almost always lady-like. I love the way she sits nice and straight, curls her long tail up close to her body, and looks at you with her innocent eyeballs.
She has entered my life and stole my heart in such an unexpected fashion. I finally got a taste of what it feels like to be a overly protective mommy, who is entirely in love, attached, and obsessed with her little furry baby. :>
10.03.2007
More Miniatures
Someone's very fond of my miniatures. Yeah, those are pretty darn cool. So here is more.
9.29.2007
Aquarium du Grand Lyon
By the end of this trip, I'm exhausted from too much cultural stuff. I have to get out of the city and soak myself in a pond of blue. It is in this water world, I find peace.
So next time you see my post, I'm off on my journey to somewhere again.
Museums No More
By the time I walked into Musée Art Contemporarain Lyon, I'm done with museums in France.
I had to come to see this one because it is the Biennale de Lyon 2007.
A group of artists in Lyon painted 400 walls of buildings to include the community into an art environment. One of the pioneers who started this project was Tony Garnie.
9.28.2007
Musée des Miniatures et Décors de Cinéma
This is a very cool museum that Dan would totally fall for. The old building has 5 floors of collection including delicate miniatures, puppets, masks and dolls for special effect in movies, and the movie set of "The Perfume".
9.27.2007
Animals in France
I was going to leave France with an impression that there aren't no cats in France. I guess they are all locked up at homes in the cities that I've visited. So you can imagine how excited I was when I saw a big black kitty wandering off the Roman ruins of Lyon.
The French love dogs, especially little ones. I saw many Yorkshire walking around. Dogs can enter many places on foot like some shops, restaurants, and airports. Cleaning after them in the public is not mandatory. Better watch where you are going in dog cities!
Did I ever mention that French pigeons are incredibly "large"? They fly close for bread crumbs.
I tried to chase one down. It was too fat and too lazy to fly away, so it ran moving its heavy butt left and right. These birds make my mouth watery, meow.
9.26.2007
Grenoble
With a population of 300,000, Grenoble stands 13th largest city in France.
In reality, it's quite small. I can see the whole city from the fortified mountain, La Bastille.
Grenoble is famous for its language school. Many Chinese flock here to learn French. I've never encountered so many Chinese anywhere else in France. It's kind of odd.
Food is good here, people are nice, things are cheaper than in Paris, but many barely speak any English. My mom made a comment about retiring and moving here. I think she's crazy.
Grenoble is very much alive in its art and history. I wandered around in La Bastille and found a gallery about Nazi's in WWII.
In the donjon of La Bastille, I also found a very small gallery of insulation art, "Music". This is my favorite piece out of the 12. The string of a red balloon is attached to the needle of an old record machine moving in a constant pace. The room has a clear sound of the record needle moving back and forth while the red figure moves side to side in front of the window.
It was incredibly cool to see an excavated site very well preserved inside of a museum.
At Musée de I'Ancien Evěché of Grenoble, I walked into the remain of a Roman city wall build in 3rd century and a water fountain inside of the baptist house build in 4th century.
9.25.2007
La Bastille
I took the world's first urban aerial lift 475 meters up to the fortified mountain. At La Bastille, visitors get a great view of the city Grenoble and the Alps. This fortified castle is a simple but beautiful architecture. It has quite a history. And I had a ghosty experience 4 floors down its donjon.
9.20.2007
Lotus de Monet
Orangerie has 8 largest paintings of Monet's water lilies. It also presents a few earlier works of Picasso and the others. We were completely wowed sitting in the center of two rooms and watching Monet in 360.
From Old to New
I ran into this unknown building near Musée Picasso in Paris. The stone wall had trace of fire. Two heavy wooden doors standing at 20 feet tall were carved with heads of Madusa. Wicked!
In Marché Vernaison, the oldest flee market in Paris, I bought a stamped and written postcard for 2 Euro. This place is a huge maze. I walked for 2 hours, and couldn't find good old marbles to add to my collection.
Did you know that the light on the very top of Eiffel Tower at night is copyrighted (by the French government I think)? Go figure.
9.18.2007
Art or Not
France has the greatest number of museums in the world. It has brought lots of experience and creativity into making great museums.
One place makes this trip to France all worthy ⎯ Centre Georges Pompidou. The museum presents amazing works from young artists to the masters in modern art. I saw some of the finest work that totally blew my mind away and overthrew my prejudice toward contemporary art of being "a compound of random meaningless junks". They are not junks when cleverly executed with originality.
The structure of this museum is a piece of work. All the pipes of the architecture is literally outside painted in different colors. One of the walls is completely see through showing off the sixth-floor escalator. A giant installation art greets you at the front door. Elegant neon signs guiding visitors to the left toward the museum collection and to the right into the galleries. The café, bookstore, and library inside the building are opened to the public to excess. It's a museum so fun to be in! Although it doesn't offer discount to students, it's worth every penny for.
You can't talk about France and not its food. A good dessert is definitely the high point of a French meal. This dessert has pineapple in layers, strawberries on the top, coconut mousse in between, and grapes around the plate. It's too pretty to look at, and too yummy to bite into. :>
I was on my way for some hot chocolate when I bumped into this giant billboard at the Madeline district. After shopping for too many museums and antique buildings, I forgot that Paris is also on top of the game in fashion. But I did took photos of the LV and Ferrari store front for my sis. :>
9.17.2007
Louvre et Pompidou
In Musée du Louvre, Psyche and Cupid is surrounded by female Japanese tourists. I heard the word "kawaii" and "romantacu" several times.
Looking out the window of Denon Hall, I can clearly see the left wing and the center courtyard of the Louvre. It takes a full day to throughly walk the building. It's huge, but it shouldn't be the excuse not giving students discounts! :<
Shooting at the reflection off a piece of glass on the 6th floor of Pompidou, I got me, and the Eiffel. Yaybee~
9.13.2007
Paris
Today is my 4th day in France, and I'm sorry I can't update my blog everyday. French simply don't use Internet as much as we do. A wired spot is hard to find, and the one in my hotel room in Paris is 8 Euro or 11 USD per hour! Expensive!
Today I’m in Nante, 2 hours southwest of Paris by train. Price is slightly acceptable here.
Oh, Paris! Hhm… Where should I start?
There is too much to see. So far I’ve visited Arc de Triomphe, Eiffel Tower, Notre-Dame, Musée d’Orsay, Jeu de Paume, Musée du Louvre, and Centre Georges Pompidou. The art is magnificent, the food is great, and the weather is perfect.
Should I start with the cute French biker I met on the metro? Or the crazy Mona Lisa fans at the Louvre? How about the amazing architecture and collections of Picasso, Mondrian, Dali, Rothko, Alexander Calder, Diane Arbus, and Lee Friedlander at Pompidou?
Of course I’ve shot too many! I’m exhausted by the end of every day! So there! I’ll post some whenever I can. Let me know what you think. Or what you want to see. :>
Place de la Concorde, a beautiful plaza sit between Musée du Louvre and the end of Avenus des Champs Elysées. Other than beautiful statues and fountains, it has a 75-feet-tall 3300-year-old golden-tip Egyptian stele and a giant fairs wheel.
Anyone who has watched The Da Vinci Code would recognize the glass pyramid by I.M. Pei in front of Musée du Louvre. It took me 5 hours to walk through two out of the three halls.
The Louvre has about 350,000 pieces of collection, but the Metropolitan Museum in NY has a better Egyptian gallery. Peronsally, the paintings and statues in Italy are far more impressive.
Musée d’Orsay is great! I walked in with my art-related student ID for free! The museum used to be a huge train station in 1900, so the architecture is incredibly beautiful and unique.
I had the privilege of seeing some great art of Picasso, Monet, Degas, Renoir, and Van Gogh.
Paris is not always black and white, but the weather is. It’s quite chilly in the morning at this time of the year. But down in the metro is sweating hot. I had to keep putting on and taking off my jacket and scarf all day long. Two busy French flies are getting warm up at the park.
Sometimes, you wish you had a macro on. :>