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My 'Taste' In ArtNever were scare quotes more appropriate. I issue this warning/disclaimer because if you disagree with any of my thoughts and comments below, you're probably right and I'm wrong. OK? EU is Full of ArtNot just the Buckethead Cellphone Guy, whom we discovered was an art in a previous blog, but arts made by the acknowledged, such as the painter (and sculptor) Picasso and even the xoodozhnik Nicolas de Stael. Art is everywhere, from the windows and columns of the castles and cathedrals I refused to mention in previous touristy blogs to actual museums and galleries, which are impossible to avoid if you're traveling with people who have a far less casual relationship with art than I do. Certain people feel an empty wall is a sin, and an unencumbered horizontal surface is a failure. If you're traveling with a camera, you take pictures. Picasso Museum in Antibes
St. Paul de VenceFrom the internet, this quote from someone or perhaps an AI: "Saint-Paul-de-Vence is a village that is likely to surprise you with its history and traditions. The village abounds in multiple architectural treasures with its decorated chapel in the south Mediterranean, its churches and alleys in the charm of old." We visited, had a nice lunch and then took a walk. The walk involved passing several art galleries and souvenir vendors. One especially engaging emporium was the Galerie "Le Capricorne" which had some extremely colorful and interesting pieces.
I can't begin to blog about all the art that one sees, deliberately or accidentally, in Europe. Just the photos I took on this relatively short trip would exhaust my patience and surely yours as well. For example, one tiny section on one of many enormous stained glass windows we saw in Prague was pointed out to us as depicting King Wenceslas as a child. (He's the one in the right.) My Own ArtAs an aside, I have neither artistic talent nor pretensions, but I have been developing my own palette of a sort, and occasionally photograph an art-in-progress. Absent over- or even underwhelming demand for a demonstration of my technique, I shall spare us all, at least for now. One hint: The medium is peanut butter and the instrument I use to commit the art is a fork. We Now Leave Europe Behind**And return to the usual random walk that this blog routinely perpetrates. Coming up, though, is a trip to Los Alamos. The Ice Cream Sandwich ConundrumAlthough I've noticed this many times, it finally achieved the status of an Observation instead of just an unremarkable oddity. Every time I eat an ice cream sandwich, the coating ends up sticking to my fingers by the time I'm done. This is constant across brands, and has been constant across the decades. And I've been eating ice cream sandwiches for a long, long time! Is it that there's only one government-approved coating? Does the brown sticky stuff have some remarkable insulating property that can't be duplicated? Is there a "standard of identity" for an ice cream sandwich that makes a less messy coating commercially unsuitable? Or is it that licking one's fingers is part of the experience? Someone out there must know! *Found on the internet for $74.99. I strongly suspect it's not the original, but I kind of like it. I'm out of horizontal surfaces, though. |
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