Sunday, October 30, 2011

Automne à Paris: Autumn in Paris

So... it has been a little while so I need to skip back in time to fill in the blanks a little. The weekend after Barcelona was pretty calm. On Friday October 14th our Wells College program took us to see Tinguely's "Le Cyclop" in the Fontainbleau Forest, which was way cooler than I anticipated! First we stopped at the grave of Jean Cocteau, who was a French poet, novelist, and playwright, among other things. He worked with such people as Pablo Picasso, Coco Chanel, and Edith Piaf, so clearly he was pretty important. Haha! Unfortunately there wasn't really much to see there, just some cool wall painting inside the old building where he was buried.



But after we stopped there, we headed into the Fountainbleau Forest to find "Le Cyclop." This was a huge sculpture that doubled as a multi-level museum! A lot of different artists were a part of the construction of this piece. There were mangled heaps of metal and lots of old gears and a track that ran in and out through the whole thing that had big silver balls swerving and spiraling as we walked through. From the front it looked like a giant Cyclops with its tongue hanging out, which we learned came from the main room on the first floor up and was first intended as a slide for kids! At one point it was refurbished and shards of mirrors were added to the entire surface of the face of the Cyclops and the tongue, so clearly it became too dangerous to function as a slide anymore.

Up on the next floor there was one giant blob column sort-of sculpture with bits of different colored tiles covering the whole thing. Next we went through an area where metal poles hung from the ceiling in the shape of a square and as you walk through they clamor and bang against each other, but once you get to the middle where there is a small free space just big enough for one person, and from inside it is a symphony of rings and chimes. It acted as a giant wind chime, if you will. After there was an area with all different colors and sizes of circular gears that, when turned on, move at different speeds and start up the track that the silver balls run on.

On the next floor up, right above the gears, there were seats that moved up and down with the gears and off to the side there was a small window to peek through and see a full kitchen built on a tilt, almost upside down, with breakfast on the table and all. We went up to the very top and there was a shallow pool of water, meant to reflect the blue of the sky, to tie nature into the overwhelmingly industrial aspects of the work. This tied in well with the fact that the whole thing was also built around a big tree. We worked our way down from there, stopping to peer into an old train car perched high above the ground with sculptures depicting victims of the Holocaust inside.

There were so many different artists that collaborated on this gigantic piece of work that it is too hard to keep straight all the different parts of the sculpture/museum, but it was such an incredible visit and I am glad I had the opportunity to go! It was the kind of thing I don't think I could have found on my own.

Unfortunately we were only allowed to take pictures from the outside of the sculpture, so I don't have any of the individual works inside, but here are some cool views!









The rest of that weekend was spent visiting a fall festival in the Bastille area of Paris where a lot of different wine shops, bakeries, bookstores, and restaurants were giving free tastes of food, wine, and teas, hosting special musical guests, and putting on special performances. The carved fruits and gourds above were being carved outside of a Thai restaurant! It was a nice calm weekend checking out what Paris has to offer in the fall season.   :)

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Barcelona!


The Garden House hostel in Barcelona


Rooftop deck at Garden House


View of Barcelona from Park Guell


Gaudi building in Park Guell


Amazing jewelry I got in Park Guell


La Sagrada Familia
(I forgot to mention it in the blog entry, but we saw it briefly with Emily and her boyfriend, amazing Cathedral Gaudi worked on but never finished, looks like a sand drip castle you make at the beach lol)


Barceloneta Beach


Montjuic Park


Homemade Paella with mussels, shrimp, chicken, and sausage!

Mon aventure à Barcelone: My Adventure in Barcelona

So, as many of you know from my Facebook, I finally got to go on my first real trip this weekend to Barcelona! It was sooo nice to finally go to Spain because the culture is so different from that of Paris. In Barcelona it feels a bit more relaxed and it was a bit warmer, which was nice.

Anyway, Elise and I arrived Friday evening and our wonderful friend, David (who lives near Barcelona but was in our French class in Paris for a few weeks) and his girlfriend Berta were so extremely kind as to pick us up from the airport and take us all the way to our Hostel! Seriously if they hadn't been so generous we definitely would have gotten lost! Once we finally found the hostel, the Garden House (a Feet-up hostel, really clean and friendly and beautiful!) we got settled in and they helped us find a restaurant nearby. David and Berta even skipped their surely delicious home-cooked meal waiting for them at home to eat with us. We had a sandwich with some typical kind of Spanish meat, I think it was Lom (pork) and some patatas bravas, which are basically french fries cut in cubes with a slightly spicy kind-of mayonnaise sauce on top? Anyway that and our Estrella beers made us very happy. Haha

The next day we got a T-10 metro pass and headed to Park Güell de Antoni Gaudí. We had to climb up pretty far, but we got a great workout and at the top we had an incredible view of Barcelona from the Northeast corner of the city! We could see all the way to the ocean shore and the surrounding mountains from up there! As we worked our way down the other side of the huge hill/mountain we found a local musician playing some kind of Marimba or something (we split a cd for 5 euro lol) and found a great jewelry artist (had to stop there too, haha) and at the bottom we found the incredible buildings and railings and tile work that Gaudí made this park famous with. So beautiful! Next we headed into town to La Rambla, which is a famous street in downtown with a lot of shopping and restaurants, to just wander for a while. We peeked into differernt tapas resturants and Spanish clothing stores. We also tried to see some other landmarks in the city, but then we heard from our other friend who got into Barcelona later, Emily, and we met up with her and her boyfriend for a snack. I tried a seafood salad because I figured sonce Barcelona is right on the ocean they are pretty good with seafood. We met up with some of Emily's other friends who were studying abroad in Barcelona later that night and then Elise and I headed back to our hostel to sleep.

Our second full day, Saturday, we were hoping to meet up with David and Berta again to do some sightseeing, but they were unavailable so we did some of our own. We had a few parks in mind and knew we wanted to find the beach, so we just got off the metro on the south end of Rambla hoping to find our way from there. Right when we got off the metro there was a craft market happening, of course, and I found some cool jewelry and possibly some Christmas gifts... Anyway after we got our fill of the market we walked along the shore for a little while (and of course we ran into 2 more markets) until we found a beach! Sitting on the shore, seeing all the people, listening to the waves, and feeling the warmth of the sun was just what we had hoped for :)  After we felt relaxed we headed to Montjuic Park in the South western corner of Barcelona because it has been said that Montjuic Park is to Barcelona as Central Park is to New York City. We didn't have a ton of time to walk around the whole park, but we at least climbed all of the stairs to get a great view of the city from a different perspective, have some croquettes for a snack (sooooo goooood) and get some nice pictures. Then it was back on the metro to head back to the hostel. We had heard word they were serving homemade Paella and Sangria for 6 euros, so we were definitely excited about that! Spanish food, and homemade nonetheless! The food was great and we met some really interesting people at the hostel. There was one lady who claimed she was a Senior, though she seemed much younger, and she was a yoga instructor traveling alone before she met up with friends to do a 500 mile hike along the northern shore of spain for 5 weeks! We also met a girl who was in Barcelona going to a circus school (she was in the hostel because she hadn't found a permanent place yet). All the people who worked there were so nice and helpful and we enjoyed the whole trip...

...except when we had to get up really early the next morning to take the metro and a train to the airport before our 8:45 am flight. That did end up being easier than we thought it would be and our early flight got us back to Paris with enough time to go to the market to restock on food, relax, study some French and (try to) go to bed early.

Great trip overall! Can't wait for more! (I am working on a day trip to Brussels, going to the south of France for my break to visit my Aunt Kristi, doing a weekend in London, and a weekend tour of the Ireland countryside!) Plus my lovely roommate Amy is coming to visit me for almost a week near Thanksgiving! I had a bad day getting lost in the metro system because of the strike, but today I am feeling like I truly have so much to be thankful for and so much to be excited about! A big thanks to my parents and the big man upstairs for making this all possible for me!

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Photos de Versailles


Palace of Versailles


Chapel in Palace of Versailles


Hall of Mirrors


Marie Antoinette's Bedroom


Palace of Versailles, from the back


The huge gardens of Versailles

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Week-end Dernier: Last Weekend

So, I have been so busy it is hard to keep up with these posts and everything I am doing as it happens, but I am trying to record everything as soon as I can so I won't forget anything!

Last weekend was jam packed! On Thursday night Elise, Emily, and I went on a 2 hour boat tour of Paris. It was better than we could have imagined! The weather was perfect, in the mid-upper 70s and the sun was setting. We learned some of the history of the city as we sailed along the Seine past all kinds of museums and the Notre Dame and the Eiffel tower and reach a better understanding of where everything was in relation to each other in the city. (We often feel like little moles taking the metros everywhere because you are just traveling around underground and you pop out of the whole and there's the Pompidou or Luxembourg Gardens, but if you asked me to walk from one place to another I would have no idea which direction to go! haha) Anyway, during this perfect evening one of the co-owners of the boat tour company and his wife came over to chat with us. We talked about where we were from and what we were doing in Paris and he told us to all look for French boyfriends ("only after we learn French," were his terms haha). Then he offered us some free champagne! So we were sitting on the top deck of the boat sailing along sipping champagne with him and his wife as the sun was setting on the Eiffel Tower... seriously it was so great, I could not make this stuff up! Naturally I forgot my camera... :(

Friday night we met up with Leanne and one of Emily's friends who is also studying abroad in Paris to relax along the river with some wine and then we headed briefly to a bar in Bastille for a little, relatively calm night.

Saturday, however was jam packed! We got up early in the morning to go to Versailles for the day and Emily, Elise, and I met Emily's friend, Helen, at the train station. It was only about an hour out of the city which was nice. Once we got there we got awesome student discounts (8 euro instead of 27) to see the Chateau, the gardens, and Marie Antoinette's little weekend home. The Chateau was HUGE and took forever to walk through, so after being in there for a few hours we were exhausted and starving! There were a lot of pretty rooms and artwork, but it was a lot to see. We found some lunch after and made our way through the gardens to Marie Antoinette's weekend house all the way at the back of the property (a good 30-40 minute walk!). That was cute too because it had famous designers' recreations of Marie Antoinette-style gowns which was soooo interesting to see! After a long day of walking we were exhausted and we got home with a few hours to rest, but after that it was time to go out for Nuit Blanche. Now, Nuit Blanche translates to "White Night," in French but it really means "all-nighter." It is pretty much an all night art festival where expositions are set up all over the city! Some were in old buildings or just projections on the the sides of buildings, but we were really excited to see it! Unfortunately the metros were especially crowded because it turned out everyone else was as excited as us to see the art (or just use an excuse to drink a lot and stay out late because the metros would be open later). We also had some trouble finding the expositions we wanted to see which was a bummer! Feeling exhausted and a little disappointed, I knew it was just time to go home and sleep for approximately forever.

The next morning there was supposed to be a huge yoga session happening in front of the Eiffel Tower but it was already full so I didn't even bother to set my alarm. Emily ended up going with her friend and really enjoyed herself though, so I regretted missing it a bit. But anyway Elise and I ended up going to this Natural History Museum to see an evolution exhibit with all kinds of animals and when we were done in there we realized there was a zoo in the same park as the museum! We were ecstatic! So, for 7 euro we wandered the monkey house and big cats and Kangaroos for an hour which we loved, and then went home to study some French and try, to no avail, to go to bed early.

It was a really busy weekend but these were some amazing experiences! Today I leave to go to Barcelona, Spain for the weekend so I will have updates on that next time!

Photos de la Région de la Loire: Photos from the Loire Region


Château de Villandry and its amazing gardens!


Château de Villandry


Château d'Azay-le-Rideau, {sigh} it looks like a Cinderella castle...


Château et des Jardins de La Chatonnière


Château et des Jardins de La Chatonnière, 
Garden of Abundance (vegetable garden) shaped like a giant leaf!


Château de Chenonceau, 
alright, seriously, this is like Disney Princess worthy


Château de Chenonceau, Gardens (Jardins)

Seeing the Loire Valley was so beautiful! I never really knew places this magnificent still existed! I was seriously blown away the whole weekend.