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Paris snaps 4

Notre Dame 6 sky dimmed tower sharpened tree and building blurred
Notre Dame, sky dimmed tower sharpened tree and building blurred (using GIMP)
Notre Dame stylized
Notre Dame stylized, (GIMP)
Notre Dame
Notre Dame
Cathedral de Notre Dame
Cathedral de Notre Dame (“CAT-ay-DROLL de NOTrha DAHM)
Cathedral de Notre Dame from the Left Bank
Cathedral de Notre Dame from the Left Bank
Sacre Couer Cathedral
Sacre Couer (Sacred Heart) Cathedral
Singer at La Mere Catherine
Singer at La Mere Catherine, by the Sacre Couer Cathedral

Saratoga Eats! Food truck event June 14, 2013

Intero Real Estate company in Saratoga did a great job sponsoring Saratoga Eats yesterday, opening their offices to offer clean bathrooms, setting up music for the kids to dance to, and advertising  ahead of time with big signs strategically placed around town.

It’s neat to see this new business model giving opportunities to entrepreneurs!  Not to mention offering fun new dining options for foodies everywhere.

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It’s not as easy as it looks. Some trucks you can tell, they decided to turn Mom’s amazing cooking into a business. But, let’s face it, Mom has a touch of memory loss and Dad and Kid don’t quite have a handle on the assembly line aspect of cranking out meals. (No names mentioned; they will hopefully get better.)

The trucks that took their time to get the order right, who had pre-made items that just needed to be cooked, that knew their inventory status, and took their time when handing you the order for things like: “Would you like me to put foil on the bottom dish so you can stack them?” “Do you want me to pour the sauce on it here?” Did better. For all of these traits, and incredible quality and taste, we give two thumbs up to Wesushi.

Wesushi

Fast action at Wesushi
Fast action at Wesushi
Cooking up a storm at Wesushi
Cooking up a storm at Wesushi
Sushi truck menu
Wesushi menu

Our favorite items from Wesushi, in order of preference. (If you have to just get one, get Sekiwake.)

Sekiwake

Lobster crunch

Also with great service and amazing taste, two thumbs up to Midday Picnic, for the killer shrimp and chorizo slider. (Comes as a mini sand with slaw to die for.) Yup, it slides right down — after tantalizing the taste buds.

Midday Picnic truck Midday Picnic menu

Snaps of Paris 2

Saint-Pierre de Chaillot
Saint-Pierre de Chaillot
Saint-Pierre de Chaillot
Saint-Pierre de Chaillot
Across from Palais Japonais
Across from Palais Japonais
Across from Palais Japonais
Across from Palais Japonais
A store for pistachios
A store for pistachios
Sculpture by Cezanne outside Louvre
Sculpture by Cezanne outside the Louvre
Small horses in Champs de Mars
Small horses in Champs de Mars
Skyline view from Louvre grounds
Skyline view from Louvre grounds

Sculpture of Paris series 2, the sculpture room

There is a lot of sculpture in the  Louvre, in various historical contexts. Then there’s just “The Sculpture Room.” When you walk in, you will be struck by the airy, light-filled space, which is large enough to artfully display many classical sculptures. It is breathtaking and utterly pleasing to the senses. There it is,  sculptures you’ve seen throughout your life, in books, all assembled with space enough around them for you to circle them and admire them from every angle, with light flooding in through traditional, palace windows. It is a magnificent display and deeply gratifying to walk into it, to experience the totality first, and then to linger over the descriptions, pause for photos, walk through the giant reproduction of a palace gate and look back across the room again from an elevated position.

It was crowded at first but then it cleared out a lot and you could get a less observer-cluttered feel for the room.

The sculpture room 1

The sculpture room 2

The sculpture room 3

The sculpture room 4

The sculpture room 5

The sculpture room 6

The sculpture room 8

The sculpture room 9

We thought this was a bathtub, but it’s a sarcophagus.

The sculpture room 10

Unlike the Dutch, the French don’t translate the art descriptions into English. This says something like: Sarcophagus of something something and heads of a lion. Around 3rd Century A.D.  White marble. In the center, on something, a young man something, his arms protected by something, and so on.

Sarcophagus explanation 10

The sculpture room 11

Here the translation is easy. It’s a fragment of a frieze. The depiction of powerful movement, the draping fabric, and the effect of relief against that wall of a frieze, I found beautiful. Avant means before, so this is 445 B.C. Remember The Victory of Samothrace, with its flowing gown and powerful motion, typifies Hellenistic art (300 – 100 or so, BC). I just noticed in trying to translate the sign below that this frieze shows the beginning of that artistic exploration.

Explanation for 11

Another frieze. Looks a bit older, going by the above information. Just starting to depict fabric and movement.

The sculpture room 12

Bernini

Bernini explanation

Nia with Venus at end

Gate at the end

The sculpture room after it has cleared out a bit.

The sculpture room 7