Saturday

Musée d'Orsay - Paris, France

The Musée d'Orsay holds one of the most impressive collections of Impressionists in the world. This is a demanding museum. It is beautiful, but it is hard to find your way through it. Many stairs and long corridors will test your physical resistance and orientation. Take your time, wear comfortable shoes, and bring your camera: you can take photos (no flash!). Five hours would be a fair time, including a pause at the awesome restaurant on the first floor (or if you are visiting in the summer, at the terrace bar on the last floor with a unique view on Paris, Montmartre, and the Sacre Coeur.

Outside: The museum is hosted in a former belle époque train station, renovated and transformed by ACT architecture group, made up of Bardon, Colboc, and Philippon. The President of the Republic, François Mitterrand, inaugurated the new museum in December 1986.Originally the station, and hotel within it, were inaugurated for the World's Fair on July 14th, 1900. The architect Laloux chose to mask the modern metallic structures with the façade of the hotel, which, built in the academic style using finely cut stone, successfully blended in with its noble neighbors. Inside, all the modern techniques were used: ramps and lifts for luggage, elevators for passengers, sixteen underground railtracks, reception services on the ground floor, and electric traction. But, by 1939, the station was to serve only the suburbs, as its platforms had become too short for the modern, longer trains that appeared with the progressive electrification of the railroads.
Since then, the building has served various purposes. It was even used as a set for several films, including Kafka's The Trial, adapted by Orson Welles. The hotel closed its doors in 1973, but not before General de Gaulle held a press conference announcing his return to power in its Salle des Fêtes (now the posh restaurant of the museum). In 1979 the decision was made to transform the old train station into a museum.
Inside: The interior design of the museum was conceived by a team of scenographers and architects directed by the Italian architect and interior designer Gae Aulenti. With Italo Rota, Piero Castiglioni (lighting consultant) and Richard Peduzzi (architectural consultant), Gae Aulenti created a grandiose choreographic effect, that can be immediately perceived as you come in. It is understandable if you want to go straight to the Impressionists. They are somewhere on the second floor and you will get there after many escalators. The Van Gogh room almost made me cry. Everything is there! Among the others, the famous self-portrait with the dashing greenish-turquoise background (1889), “l'Eglise d'Auvers” (1890), “Chaumes a Cordeville” (1890), “Siesta” (1890), and the unforgettable “Van Gogh’s bedroom” (1889). Beside Van Gogh, my favorite paintings are Pissarro’s “Femme dans un clos” (1887), Gauguin’s “Vairumati” (1897) and “Paysage de Bretagne Le Moulin David” (1894), Signac’s “Les Andelys, la berge” (1886), Cezanne’s “Nature morte au panier” (1889), Monet’s “Le Jardin de Monet a Giverny” (1900), “Femmes a l'ombrelle” (1886), and “Regates a Argenteuil” (1872), Renoir’s “Bal du Moulin de la Galette” (1876) and “Torse effet de soleil” (1875), and Caillebotte’s “Raboteurs de parquets” (1875) with its sublime sense of perspective. I also loved a winter landscape by the Swiss Cuno Amiet (“Paysage de niege,” 1904) for its sense of calm and solitude. Of course, you should not skip the first floor with its collections of symbolists and traditionalists. As I said, you will need a good five-hour visit to get a good sense of the phenomenally extensive collection. It is a must for everyone who has a passion for modern art. (Last visited 10/2008)

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