Thursday, May 7, 2009

Monet's Water Lilies



Yesterday the road (or shall I say, the Metro) led to L'Orangerie. This little museum was high on Vicki's list and was a first for me as it has been under reconstruction pretty much since my first visit to Paris years back. It is at the south-west end of the Tuileries gardens, and its major feature is two full rooms of Monet water lilies. Yes, that was not a typo... ROOMS.

Each room is oval and has four panels, hugging the curves of the walls, and obviously created specifically for the space. It is close to gasp inducing. As with any painting whose story is told as much by its texture as its color, no photo can do them justice but I took them anyway. (And can I just state for the record that I so appreciate the French being pretty relaxed about photography as long as you don't use a flash... the English and the Italians are increasingly forbidding it, I assume to bolster their postcard sales. Think about that... the French being more relaxed than the Italians!)

Vicki, like me is a quilt maker, and she's no slouch with color. But she had a revelation this week after steeping in Monet's work at both L'Orangerie and the D'Orsay... she knew she had always been into Monet but didn't realize that she has been chasing his pink/peach/blue/green palette in fabrics for years. No wonder she makes beautiful quilts.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

The room in the picture looks as though it is out of 2001:A space odeseey... but let's not think about how it's 2009 and we AREN'T traveling in space, as predicted. That is for another story.

I would have loved to have just sat in the room and enjoyed the calm. WOW.. you lucky ducks.