Mike Jones
<font color=993300>....nothing clever to say... ju
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2003
- Messages
- 1,372
Day 5 Friday 1st June 2007
(Weather: Pretty good! Sunny on and off)
We went to bed last night without a definitive plan for today, as some of our options were very much weather-dependant. As the parks here dont open until 10.00am, we dont feel under any pressure (OCD, self-imposed!) to be up silly early, so let nature takes its course. Well, sadly, nature was busy, and we are woken instead by Adam, wandering around, bored, at about 7.20.
After chucking on some clothes, we head off for the breakfast goods. The weather feels a bit fresher today, but clear skies promise a decent day. We enjoy our meal with the kids and then take turns showering as usual.
Theres no absolute consensus about what we all want to do today, but we are all clear that we have done the parks pretty much to death, and wont fill another day there. So it looks like Paris, but Beth is whingeing on about not walking anywhere far today. If free to choose for everyone, Amanda and I would prefer to select another, different part of the city to explore, as we did on Wednesday. However, dragging at least one, and possibly two, tired and grumbly teens around Montmartre doesnt appeal, so we suggest visiting the Museum of Modern Art at the Pompidou amazingly, the kids both agree to this plan, and off we go.
We arrive at the Disney area car park at 9.45, parking in the fourth row from the top. Its generally sunny, with large clouds, and pleasantly warm. The RER station is a lot busier than Wednesday I suppose we are a bit later and the line for the ticket desks is long. Amanda and the kids join it, as a back up, and I try to obtain tickets from one of the automated machines. After a couple of false starts, I succeed, although I only manage to buy one-way tickets instead of returns.
Theres a train waiting which sets off, about half full, at 10.10. Amanda and I spend the journey looking at city hotels in the Rough Guide for next time (sans enfants!) and fending off beggars and buskers, the first time weve been bothered this week.
We arrive at Les Halles again at 10.50, and, having our bearings better than previously, we exit the station easily, on the right side, and walk the short distance to the Pompidou.
Everything looks so much better today, due to the sunshine.
Theres a modest queue snaking across the plaza, which we join. It moves quickly enough once the doors are opened at 11.00, and we are inside, tickets purchased, by 11.05.
As I described on Wednesday, the Modern Art Museum is located on the upper floors of the building, and after a quick restroom stop, we use the external, glass-enclosed escalators to climb to the fifth. The views on the way up are impressive.
This upper floor holds the national collections from 1905 1960. Its a lovely, easy gallery to navigate, with a series of large, airy rooms accessed from the main hallway running the full length of the building. These rooms are also interconnected.
Security is very laid back, with most exhibits completely approachable, and only a few that are protected by a low wire about a foot off the floor.
There are a few, informally dressed, gallery employees who lounge lazily, some reading, in chairs at the entrance to some of the rooms.
We stroll through, admiring a lovely mix of paintings and sculptures. Amanda is delighted when she discovers not one but three canvasses by her favourite artist, Marc Chagall. Surprisingly, there does not seem to be any sanction against taking photographs, so, although feeling a little self-conscious, I snap a few photos along the way.
The exhibits include galleries dedicated to Dali, Miro and Picasso (Im still gob-smacked that you can walk right up to these priceless paintings until your nose nearly touches the brushstrokes!) and some wonderful, folded metal sculptures by Antoine Pevsner.
We reach the end of the main hallway, where the full-length windows afford fantastic views across the city to Montmartre and Sacre Coeur.
Returning along the hallway, after exploring a couple more rooms stuffed with Bracques, Picassos and Matisses, theres a terrace with water feature and sculptures, beyond which you can see the Eiffel tower in the distance.
The kids seem to be absorbed too this plan wasnt so bad!
(Weather: Pretty good! Sunny on and off)
We went to bed last night without a definitive plan for today, as some of our options were very much weather-dependant. As the parks here dont open until 10.00am, we dont feel under any pressure (OCD, self-imposed!) to be up silly early, so let nature takes its course. Well, sadly, nature was busy, and we are woken instead by Adam, wandering around, bored, at about 7.20.
After chucking on some clothes, we head off for the breakfast goods. The weather feels a bit fresher today, but clear skies promise a decent day. We enjoy our meal with the kids and then take turns showering as usual.
Theres no absolute consensus about what we all want to do today, but we are all clear that we have done the parks pretty much to death, and wont fill another day there. So it looks like Paris, but Beth is whingeing on about not walking anywhere far today. If free to choose for everyone, Amanda and I would prefer to select another, different part of the city to explore, as we did on Wednesday. However, dragging at least one, and possibly two, tired and grumbly teens around Montmartre doesnt appeal, so we suggest visiting the Museum of Modern Art at the Pompidou amazingly, the kids both agree to this plan, and off we go.
We arrive at the Disney area car park at 9.45, parking in the fourth row from the top. Its generally sunny, with large clouds, and pleasantly warm. The RER station is a lot busier than Wednesday I suppose we are a bit later and the line for the ticket desks is long. Amanda and the kids join it, as a back up, and I try to obtain tickets from one of the automated machines. After a couple of false starts, I succeed, although I only manage to buy one-way tickets instead of returns.
Theres a train waiting which sets off, about half full, at 10.10. Amanda and I spend the journey looking at city hotels in the Rough Guide for next time (sans enfants!) and fending off beggars and buskers, the first time weve been bothered this week.

We arrive at Les Halles again at 10.50, and, having our bearings better than previously, we exit the station easily, on the right side, and walk the short distance to the Pompidou.

Everything looks so much better today, due to the sunshine.

Theres a modest queue snaking across the plaza, which we join. It moves quickly enough once the doors are opened at 11.00, and we are inside, tickets purchased, by 11.05.
As I described on Wednesday, the Modern Art Museum is located on the upper floors of the building, and after a quick restroom stop, we use the external, glass-enclosed escalators to climb to the fifth. The views on the way up are impressive.

This upper floor holds the national collections from 1905 1960. Its a lovely, easy gallery to navigate, with a series of large, airy rooms accessed from the main hallway running the full length of the building. These rooms are also interconnected.
Security is very laid back, with most exhibits completely approachable, and only a few that are protected by a low wire about a foot off the floor.

There are a few, informally dressed, gallery employees who lounge lazily, some reading, in chairs at the entrance to some of the rooms.
We stroll through, admiring a lovely mix of paintings and sculptures. Amanda is delighted when she discovers not one but three canvasses by her favourite artist, Marc Chagall. Surprisingly, there does not seem to be any sanction against taking photographs, so, although feeling a little self-conscious, I snap a few photos along the way.


The exhibits include galleries dedicated to Dali, Miro and Picasso (Im still gob-smacked that you can walk right up to these priceless paintings until your nose nearly touches the brushstrokes!) and some wonderful, folded metal sculptures by Antoine Pevsner.
We reach the end of the main hallway, where the full-length windows afford fantastic views across the city to Montmartre and Sacre Coeur.

Returning along the hallway, after exploring a couple more rooms stuffed with Bracques, Picassos and Matisses, theres a terrace with water feature and sculptures, beyond which you can see the Eiffel tower in the distance.


The kids seem to be absorbed too this plan wasnt so bad!