The City of Lights
Part 7
Auguste Rodin is one of the very few sculptors since the time of Michelangelo whose name is a household word all over the world. His works are certainly spread around - there are at least twenty copies of his famous statue The Thinker in various museums all over the world.
The Rodin Museum in Paris is a tribute to this great sculptor. The Paris version is much more elaborate than the smaller Philadelphia museum which also honors Rodin. I described the Philadelphia museum in my story The City of Brotherly Love which is also in this forum.
Here are a couple of views of the front exterior of the Rodin Museum in Paris:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...din_Museum.JPG
https://academics.skidmore.edu/weblo...aris%20009.jpg
This view from the museum toward the city shows that the museum is not out in the country somewhere, which you might gather from the previous two views, but rather is right in the middle of all the city’s action:
http://www.sobi.org/photos/places/Pa...din/mr0002.jpg
Rodin’s best-known work - The Thinker - which rivals Michelangelo’s David as the most famous sculpture in the world:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...TheThinker.jpg
Some of Rodin’s other works include The Burghers of Calais, his most heroic and moving historical tribute; Eternal Springtime, one of the most powerful works dealing with human love; and monuments to leading French intellectuals such as Apotheosis of Victor Hugo.
Rodin was a big fan of Dante and The Divine Comedy. The culminating creation of his career was The Gates of Hell, on which he worked from 1880 until his death in 1917. This artwork intended to represent the entrance to the underworld as described in Dante’s Inferno.
https://academics.skidmore.edu/weblo...aris%20012.jpg
And The Kiss, another of Rodin’s statues, represents Francesca da Rimini and her lover, who happened to also be the brother of her husband. Well, Francesca and her brother-in-law Paolo Malatesta are immortalized in Dante’s Inferno, representing the sin of Lust. The hauntingly memorable lines describing their plight are:
Nessun maggior dolore,
Che ricordarsi del tempo felice
Nella miseria.
What this means, and as is almost always the case, it loses something in translation:
There is no greater agony,
Than remembering times of ecstasy
When later locked in total misery.
The original of The Kiss is located at the Tate Museum in London, which rivals only Madrid’s Prado in the minds of crossword puzzlers. While it’s possible you will be able to tell when you look at this statue that it is called The Kiss, especially if you are an armchair detective, I should still tell you that rather than just let you figure it out all by yourself:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...eum,_Paris.jpg
The museum maintains its own website, if you’d care to explore any further:
http://www.musee-rodin.fr/welcome.htm
The Église Saint-Sulpice is an historical and lovely building, and it sits in some great surroundings. We won’t go into the long history of the church, which involved building on top of older structures dating back to the tenth century. What we see today was begun in 1646, but wasn’t finished until 1870. And such perfect timing – it would sustain considerable battle damage from the Franco-Prussian War in 1871.
A lovely fountain sits directly in front of the church - it depicts four bishops from the days of Louis XIV:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...008-03-14_.jpg
http://static.panoramio.com/photos/original/4764902.jpg
I can’t find any large pictures that show the entire façade, so here is a small one:
http://www.astro.ulg.ac.be/RPub/Coll...pice_Paris.jpg
Here’s a much larger photo, but unfortunately, part of the church is obscured by some ongoing renovation to one of the two towers in this view:
http://www.fotothing.com/photos/1da/...51073a_487.jpg
The church and the fountain together, with the renovation work cleverly masked by the fountain:
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/133/4...1bb0054d_o.jpg
The church has a beautiful pipe organ:
http://www.sacred-destinations.com/f...c-claudecf.jpg
And here’s what is said to be a pulpit, but I don’t understand why all the chairs seem to be pointing in another direction - of course it might just be because I’m Jewish and don’t understand how Catholic services work. I’ve asked a few Catholics, but so far, nobody has come up with an explanation.
http://img32.imageshack.us/img32/650...picepulpit.jpg
There are lots of beautiful art works in the church - here’s just one typical painting, which is entitled Saint Michael Defeats the Devil:
http://www.wga.hu/art/d/delacroi/5/505delac.jpg
The Paris Métro has given its name to many other subway systems around the world. Living in the Washington, DC area, I always thought our Metro came before anyone else’s, because our first segment here started so long ago - in 1976. But I later learned that the Paris Métro was a little bit older, since it opened in 1900 for use in the Paris World’s Fair.
I’m sure you remember that several other things opened in 1900 along with the Paris World’s Fair – namely the Grand Palais, the Petit Palais, and the Pont Alexandre III. The Paris subway system is the second busiest in Europe (behind only Moscow) and carries 4.5 million passengers a day.
Here’s an example of why it’s wise to take the Métro if at all possible:
http://philip.greenspun.com/images/2...affic.half.jpg
Here’s how they mark the stations at street level so even someone like me can figure out where to go:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...tro_Sign_2.jpg
They post maps like this so you know where to get on the train, and where to get off:
http://www.ideamerge.com/motorhomes/...aris_metro.gif
However, I had so much trouble reading this tiny-print map that I wound up taking cabs everywhere I went.
The world’s largest underground station is Châtelet-Les Halles:
http://img357.imageshack.us/img357/1428/img03807nx.jpg
http://static.panoramio.com/photos/o...l/12771428.jpg
And here’s a typical train in the very modern system:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...-_Becon_01.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...59-Ligne-4.jpg
The Place des Victoires is a public square, but it’s shaped like a circle. I found this to be very confusing since I learned in school that previous attempts to square the circle had always failed, even going all the way back to those old Greek mathematicians like Archimedes. The focal point of this circular square is a statue of King Louis XIV riding a horse, which I learned is called an equestrian statue. I guess people consider you much classier if you say equestrian rather than the less-educated riding a horse, so I’ll stick to equestrian from now on.
The architecturally-pleasing buildings which circle the statue are private homes on the upper floors, with commercial establishments on the street level.
Here’s what the square looked like in a nineteenth century postcard:
http://www.bellecpa.com/slides/big/Jul28594.JPG
And here is what it looks like today:
http://static.panoramio.com/photos/original/4222999.jpg
http://static.panoramio.com/photos/o...l/21158943.jpg
It turns out that there was actually another statue of Louis XIV here before, but like so many other features of the city, it became a casualty of the French Revolution and was torn down in 1792. The current statue was commissioned in 1828 by the restored Bourbon King Charles X - remember that the Bourbons came back for a while after Napoleon’s fall.
Next up: the Latin Quarter and its magnificent Panthéon, as well as La Bourse, Hôtel de Ville, and Palais de l’Élysées.