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Monday 14 January 2019

Tempus Fugit




 With all the museums and chateaux we are visiting , we see many French clocks. . .there appears to be an obsession with clocks. Hence, we are well aware that Tempus Fugit!

 Here we are in 2019 already. The boat is still floating, the peanut butter supply is being maintained and the use of it, by other than the Squirrel, is being carefully rationed. Visitors have come and gone as has Christmas and New Year and we are expecting our next batch of visitors during February and March. We are searching now for a safe and secure mooring for Forty Roses as she summers alone. We plan to check out a berth in Soissons this weekend. We vow, as it is January, to eat less delicious cheese, have fewer Sunday croissants and cut out baguettes altogether. John is swimming four of seven days at his pool and bicycling to and fro, while I do the old walking thing and search out phenomena we simply must see. We spent a lovely New Year’s Eve with our neighbours and celebrated in their wonderfully French way with foie gras on little toasts and much champagne. Children and adults welcomed we Canadians, and we did not miss the crowds and the Gilet Jaunes on the Champs d’Elysee. We know the light show was spectacular as were the fireworks but the crowds did not appeal.

So we began the year with a visit, on the Premier or first Sunday, to the country house of Josephine and Napoleon Bonaparte in Rueil-Mal, called Malmaison. ( We should explain here that on the Premier Sunday of each month public buildings that usually charge a fee are open and free to all. A wonderful idea). It is a Metro ride and a navette trip outside Paris, but well worth it. Despite being January, the roses cut back and nothing green in the massive garden, the house was well worth the trip. We plan to head back in the spring and wish we were around for the rose bloom in May.
Josephine bought the house, well outside Paris, while Napoleon was away on his Egyptian Campaign. Upon his return he was furious with her for spending so  much money, as the house, at the time was 300,000 francs and needed massive renovation. She spent a fortune on the extensive changes she wrought but in the end it brought a great deal of happiness to the Bonapartes. Her objective with the garden ? “ To turn it into the most beautiful and curious garden in Europe, a model of good cultivation”.  She planted rare and exotic plants, built a heated orangery containing 300 pineapple plants and eventually a greenhouse heated by dozens of stoves. The roses became the most famous aspect of her garden. The Empress had the Belgian artist Pierre Joseph Redouté record her roses and lilies,  prints of which  sell to this day.
Animals of all types were added, swans, gazelles, ostriches, zebras to name a few. After her divorce ( she could not produce an heir despite two children from her previous marriage, so Napoleon married Marie-Louise of Austria) she remained at her beloved Malmaison until her death in 1814.  Napoleon did live there again after her death and after his defeat at Waterloo in 1815,  before his exile to Saint Helena.
It is now a National Museum, open to the public and well worth a trip. But we do wonder at the tolerance of the population, who after ousting Henry XVIII, really permitted the Bonapartes to become royalty and spend every bit as much.

In addition to photos from Malmaison we have added those from the Musée Marmottan. This interesting museum is located in the 16th arrondissement at the edge of the Jardin de Ranelagh. It is surrounded by some of the most beautiful Haussmann apartment buildings. Long known for its wealth the 16th is filled with parks, prestigious schools and ambassadorial homes, a favourite place of residence. It is the only arrondissement to be divided into two postal codes; one for the north portion and another for the south section.  75016 and 75116 are well recognized. In the Jardin de Ranelagh at the edge of which is the   Marmottan, there is a monument to Jean de La Fontaine, a famous French poet and writer,  It is made of  bronze, by Charles Correia (1984), depicting La Fontaine with a fox and a raven at his feet. He was, of course, the writer of the fable Le Corbeau et Le Renard a morality poem about the fate of those who fall for flattery.  It replaces another monument that paid tribute to the poet, made in 1891 by the sculptor Alphonse Dumilatre, which was  melted down under the German occupation, in 1942.  The foundations (with the stone bench) were preserved. The Marmottan was a mansion owned by the family of that name, who donated it as a museum, already filled with a marvelous family collection. Subsequent donations have ensured the house is filled with Impressionists work as well as other collections. Right now there is a  exhibition of some 60 works from private collections around the world, some of which are rarely if ever seen.

And of course we saw Richard and Dan off last night at Gare Du Nord , on their way to the IBIS and CDG for early flights home to Canada today. We had a lovely Saturday and Sunday with them as they returned from their Italian trip with many stories and great photos. We believe they have had a grand trip and it was a treat to have them with us. 




Malmaison on a Grey Day in January


Premier Sunday of the Month Entrance Fees Waived


The Most Beautiful Pool Table: Apparently Josephine Played Well


And Backgammon Table



Called the Gilded Room,  it is True to Its Name


After Josephine's divorce from Napoleon the decor was lightened and modernized


This is original furniture in the Music room and the entire room remains as it once was.



The white and gold panels are the work of Delécluze, completed 1810-1811


These delicate panels vary in design


The Dining Room was decorated in the Pompeiian style in 1800 . The eight dancers painted on panels are by Louis Lafitte


Josephine, one of many portraits displayed at Malmaison


The Library contains this intriguing mechanical desk. When closed it becomes a simple circular table


The Library has many interesting elements including a hidden staircase to Napoleon's upper floor apartment

Hundreds of original volumes beautifully bound. 


Tempus Fugit




This was considered "an ordinary bedroom".


The Clock Collection Alone is Fascinating


Interesting Detail Right Down to the Andirons


The Toilette Cabinet of Josephine. . discreetly closes up entirely. 



Napoleon was a Handsome Man


Napoleon Crossing the Alps is the title given to the five versions of an oil on canvas equestrian portrait of Napoleon Bonaparte painted by the French artist Jacques-Louis David between 1801 and 1805. This one is resident in Malmaison


Napoleon Bonaparte Compass


Protractor, ruler used on many Campaigns


A Huge Woven Tapestry of Josephine made by the Famous Gobelins Company in Paris


Beautiful Porcelain Plates created by Sèvres, Expressly for Josephine


Botanical


Plant Depictions


Also an entire Dinner Service by Sèvres


Including Exquisite Soup Cups


A Magnificent Gobelins Tapestry


Josephine's Salon


Her Mirror and personal grooming cabinet


Her bed until her Death in May, 1814



Both Josephine and Napoleon Bonaparte were beguiled by cabinetry that appeared as a simple exterior but opened to showcase neatly organized interiors or secret spaces.  

Statue in Jardin de Ranelagh


Jean de la Fontaine, author of the fable The Fox and the Crow

Just for Fun....No Snow but this was Jardin de Ranelagh in a Snowstorm

White and Yellow Chrysanthemums, Gustave Caillebotte: Musée Marmottan


Two Women at a Piano, Gustave Caillebotte

Bouquet with Mangoes: Paul Gauguin ( the photo does not do justice to this gorgeous painting)


Commode - Secrétaire 1810


Lovely Details


Another Elegant Clock


Just the Item for the Mantel!


Napoleon Bonaparte, Premier Consul by Piat-Joseph Sauvage 1799


What Graceful Elements!


Allée de Sapins à Varengeville: Claude Monet

La Blanchisseuse: Toulouse Lautrec famously said" Make it True and Not Ideal"


Caillebotte, Gustave; 1848-1894. 

- "The bank at Petit Gennevilliers and the Seine", 1890. 


Caillebotte, Gustave; 1848-1894. 

- "Déjeuner" . note the odd perspective and the appearance of the plate in the foreground. the young man in the painting is Gustave's younger brother who died 2 years later. Mère is at the table head. 


After several hours of looking at paintings and artifacts this looked delicious " Tarte" Claude Monet


Le Regate, 1892 : Théo van Rysselberghe (Belgian, 1862–1926)

Monet visited the tulip fields in Holland. 



These two paintings by Claude Monet clearly depict what he tried to capture.


The nascent moment. The same scene at different times of the day




Of course he devoted his latter years to the watergarden and Nympheas or Waterlilies in a myriad of forms


Musée Marmottan holds many Monet we have not seen before

Including this work that glows with rich orange and yellow





Swanlike creature


Intricate Locks


Winged Griffons Drinking from a Fountain


Sèvres Vase with Magnificent Glaze


Julie Manet,  daughter of Berthe Morisot as a young woman painted by her Mother


Children in the Basin 1886: Berthe Morisot 1841-1895


Luminous Still Life: Cut Apple and Glass Pitcher: Berthe Morisot


Berthe Morisot painted by Edouard Manet







Still Life: John with Coffee and Madelaine post Marmatton


Apero Time


With Evelyn, Liz, Chris & John


Station F Light Fixtures






A Polly Finch original paper-cut picture of Forty Roses III from Blythe, Jim & Annabel


Paper Bag!


King's Cake from Dan


Waving Goodbye  at Gare du Nord....& getting on the Right Train!