After a great few days in Normandy, we headed to Paris, where we started to break off into our Abbey ROADcourse groups: I was in the Renaissance art group, so I got to go to some relatively famous churches and art museums in Paris (perhaps you've heard of the Louvre and Musee D'Orsay? :P). Other students on the program chose either a Literature course or a History course, so they focused on other sites in Paris. Another exciting part of Paris Week was that Anthony got to come and tag along to the different sites we visited, and then I got to drag him along (literally, there was quite a lot of metro running to get to some of these places before closing, sorry Anthony) to some sites I'd always wanted to visit but had never had the chance before (Musée Dupuytren and the Catacombs, namely).
It was also much colder than anyone had expected, so I also spent a good part of the week searching for additional layers to add to my wardrobe and ultimately ended up getting sick by the end of the week, which led to a relatively stressful time in Amsterdam trying to find antibiotics (but I'm getting ahead of myself...).
I couldn't take pictures in Musée Dupuytren, which is only open Tuesday - Friday from something like 1 - 3 pm, and is actually on the campus of the University of Rene Descartes, so it's kind of hard to find, but it was really fantastic - it's a medical oddities museum, so it contains a bunch of preserved specimens from the medical school in years past. There's everything from conjoined twins to deformed skeletons to diseased organs to preserved brains here, although it is kind of difficult to go through if you don't have medical and/or French knowledge: everything is labeled in French. The curator of the museum also made sure to inform us that it is not a "freak show" kind of museum, it's definitely more anatomical, and that's important to remember. The other really fascinating part of the museum was that it stores some specimens studied by Paul Broca, the anatomist who discovered that different parts of the brain are responsible for different functions. He's famous primarily for the discovery of Broca's region, the part of the brain that controls speech, and the brain of the patient he studied to discover this region is found in Musée Dupuytren.
Here's some highlights from Paris:
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Notre Dame! |
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More Notre Dame |
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Even more Notre Dame... notice the saint holding his own head. |
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Famous tapestry of "The Lady and the Unicorn" in the Cluny Museum |
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Some modern art in L'Orangerie, one of my favorite museums. We couldn't take pictures of the water lilies, but they were amazing. I think this painting is called "La viande" (the meat). |
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Renoir in L'Orangerie... one of my favorites. |
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It was so foggy one day that the top of the Eiffel Tower actually disappeared in the clouds! |
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Arc de Triumphe! |
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Sacre Coeur in the snow... who would've thought we'd get to see this? |
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Glass pyramid at the Louvre on one of our sunnier days. |
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One of many of Da Vinci's pieces in the Louvre that get overlooked for the Mona Lisa |
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Winged Victory! Apparently she used to stand at the front of a ship as a figure head. |
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Venus de Milo! As Dr. Blondin put it, "We've been waiting a thousand years for her drape to drop.":) |
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Familiar face at the Louvre... |
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The beautiful Musée D'Orsay, which used to be a train station in Paris and is now a museum with the largest collection of impressionist and post-impressionist works of art in the world. |
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Hotel de Ville |
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"The Thinker" at the Rodin museum/sculpture garden. I loved how this museum was set up: part of the sculptures were in a garden, and some other pieces were in Rodin's former house. |
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Rodin's "The Burghers of Calais" |
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Notre Dame again! |
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Catacombs... it was really eerie to know that 6 million people were transported here when the cemeteries in Paris got too full - the tunnels seemed to go on forever, and we only saw part of the catacombs. |
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And finally, the beautiful Saint-Chappelle with an incredible amount of stained glass. |
And that wraps up Paris! Amsterdam's next :)