Who is Online

We have 113 guests and no members online

Aix-en-Provence

Here we are in Aix-en-Provence, the town of Cezanne. And they actually have some of his work here.

Aix, by comparison to other towns we have visited, seems rather boring but we have been here for just a few hours. There is a Cezanne exhibition at one of the galleries that we will check out tomorrow.

The the greatest interest this afternoon was driving by the back roads across classic French countryside.

We have programmed the car direction finding person 'madam butterfly' to avoid main roads. It's a Citroen C4 diesel with built-in navigation. Madam butterfly is not always accurate and makes some really silly suggestions like: 'When possible do a U-turn' when travelling down a one way street in the correct direction.

But she can be criticised without chucking the map out of the window or screaming back. 

 

Aix-en-Provence Aix-en-Provence2
Aix-en-Provence3 Aix-en-Provence4
 

Aix-en-Provence

 

 

Oh dear, the hotel room is good with its own kitchen and consequently we had a nice breakfast from ingredients purchased at the supermarket yesterday.  But Aix hasn’t improved.  Maybe it’s the weather. 

It’s a University town and there are lots of young people of student age about.  Our hotel has quite high security with steel shutters and we are given to understand that this is necessary.  The car is locked away in the car park in the basement. We’re here for a couple of days.  We’ve looked in at the cathedral and walked all around the town wondering what the fuss is about.  There is a Cezanne trail that we followed through the old town but we haven’t been to see the quarry where he worked or other such destinations.

The Cezanne exhibition turned out to be very popular despite a high ticket price.  Wendy was holding our tickets and some woman demanded to see mine and got frustrated that I couldn't respond in French.  The exhibition was worthwhile particularly as it was pouring down outside.  It included some nice Cezanne watercolours and an interesting Van Gough as well as Renoir, Modigliani and Soutine. It was from the private collection of the American Henry Pearlman and is certainly impressive in the hands of an individual collector but it wasn't really a proper Cezanne exhibition with representative works from different periods and media.  There was none of his heavy impasto, for example.

We had imagined that Aix would be a good base for exploring some small villages in the region and set-out one morning in the car.  Unfortunately most of those in our local guide are small working towns of no particular merit.  The people are generally quite poor and the longed for café or cute restaurant generally turned out to be a run-down 'greasy spoon' patronised by two or three old men and a dog - literally.

 

Around Aix Around Aix2
Around Aix3 Around Aix4
 

Towns around Aix

 

 

But a couple had some picturesque elements.  We needed a better, more selective, guide with just the best one or two, not the one we have from the tourist office in Aix with some twenty or thirty ordinary little regional villages all vying for the tourist Euro with an overblown write-up.

 

 

No comments

Travel

Sri Lanka

 

 

 

In February 2023 we joined an organised tour to Sri Lanka. 

 

 

Beginning in the capital Colombo, on the west coast, our bus travelled anticlockwise, in a loop, initially along the coast; then up into the highlands; then north, as far as Sigiriya; before returning southwest to Colombo.

Read more: Sri Lanka

Fiction, Recollections & News

The Coronation

Last Time

 

 

When George VI died unexpectedly in February 1952, I was just 6 years old, so the impact of his death on me, despite my parents' laments for a good wartime leader and their sitting up to listen to his funeral on the radio, was not great.

At Thornleigh Primary School school assemblies I was aware that there was a change because the National Anthem changed and we now sang God Save The Queen.

Usually, we would just sing the first verse, accompanied by older children playing recorders, but on special occasions we would sing the third verse too. Yet for some mysterious reason, never the second.

The Coronation was a big deal in Australia, as well as in Britain and the other Dominions (Canada, South Africa and New Zealand) and there was a lot of 'bling': china; tea towels; spoons; and so on. The media went mad.

Read more: The Coronation

Opinions and Philosophy

Luther - Father of the Modern World?

 

 

 

 

To celebrate or perhaps just to mark 500 years since Martin Luther nailed his '95 theses' to a church door in Wittenberg and set in motion the Protestant Revolution, the Australian Broadcasting Commission has been running a number of programs discussing the legacy of this complex man featuring leading thinkers and historians in the field. 

Much of the ABC debate has centred on Luther's impact on the modern world.  Was he responsible for today? Without him, might the world still be stuck in the 'Middle Ages' with each generation doing more or less what the previous one did, largely within the same medieval social structures?  In that case could those inhabitants of an alternative 21st century, obviously not us, as we would never have been born, still live in a world of less than a billion people, most of them working the land as their great grandparents had done, protected and governed by an hereditary aristocracy, their mundane lives punctuated only by variations in the weather; holy days; and occasional wars between those princes?

Read more: Luther - Father of the Modern World?

Terms of Use

Terms of Use                                                                    Copyright