01 July 2012
Street Food
There's a sign, high above one of the charming streets in Monaco Ville (le rocher) that says 'Street Food.' (see small photo) Here you'll find cafés and bars and pizzerias where you can buy snacks and reasonably priced meals. A busy street, thronging with tourists.
So - 'street food' calls for 'street photography' ...
30 June 2012
29 June 2012
Night Out in Monaco
Coral seems to be the going colour this year.
These ladies are ready for a night out in Monte Carlo. They are walking across the forecourt in front of the Grimaldi Forum on Avenue Princesse Grace.
28 June 2012
27 June 2012
Nall's Pansy
To get to the Grimaldi Forum's theatre you go down, down via escalators into the depths. And there high up on a wall, just before the theatre entrance is this enormous pansy. Click to enlarge and you'll see this is made entirely in mosaic, in fact Opio mosaic. Opio is a village not far from Monaco famous for its glass.
Artist, Nall has two installations in the Grimaldi Forum, "Pensee Sunrise" and "Pensee Sunset" - I'm not sure which this is. Each meausre 6 yards by 6 yards and you can buy postage stamps of the works in any Monaco post office.
Alabama-born Nall lives and works in Vence. Click on the link to read about him and his work.
26 June 2012
25 June 2012
Toned Beauty
Don't you love how the soft salmon colour of this lady's dress tones so beautifully with her gorgeous hair. Note the shoe colour too.
She's walking towards Larvotto Beach and looking towards Cap Martin.
24 June 2012
23 June 2012
Monte Carlo Beach Hotel - the Pool
The pool of the renovated Monte Carlo Beach Hotel. This was taken in April. No doubt those sunbeds will have bodies on them today.
22 June 2012
An Insect from Jupiter?
You do see the strangest things in Monaco. This looks a bit like a large insect, doesn't it? Perhaps from a distant planet?
In fact it's an electric motorbike make by a Swiss company - with rain protection thrown in. You see many electric vehicles in Monaco. The Principality is keen on promoting a green environment.
21 June 2012
20 June 2012
Chihuahua amongst the Cheeses
I'm not sure of the law in Monaco but probably 'dogs are not allowed' in the Carrefour supermarket. This doesn't seem to stop some shoppers putting their little dogs in their trolley.
You often see a chihuahua amongst the cheeses ...
Photo taken on the escalator that goes down to the car park of the shopping complex in Fontvieille.
19 June 2012
Les Thermes Marin de Monte Carlo - Windows
The massively tall windows at the Thermes Marin de Monte Carlo.
Ignore the sky - today it's a perfect Mediterranean blue and going to be hot again.
18 June 2012
Les Thermes Marin de Monte Carlo
Les Thermes Marin de Monte Carlo is a beautiful spa, gym, pool and restaurant with stunning views over the port of Monaco. This is the entrance.
17 June 2012
The Realtor's Office
A pretty corner in Fontvieille. This is a realtor's office whose windows reflect one the restaurants that line the port.
16 June 2012
Botero's Fat Foot
Maybe we can put our feet up for the weekend? This foot is from Botero's wonderful Woman Smoking a Cigarette which you'll find in the Park Paysager de Fontvieille.
15 June 2012
Walking the dog ...
Walking the dog in Fontvieille - small boats set against the magnificent backdrop of the rockface that is le rocher. Look way up and you'll see the cathedral.
14 June 2012
13 June 2012
12 June 2012
Place François Bosio
There's a tiny square, Place François Bosio, opposite Le Pinocchio which is packed with tables that surround what appears to be a well.
At the back of the square is a bronze of François Bosio, a famous sculptor born in Monaco. Click on the link to read about him.
When you see photos of hundreds of apartments surrounding the port, it's easy to forget these little gems.
11 June 2012
Learning to eat well ...
Doubtless one of the reasons French and Italian childen (and Monegasque too of course) grow up to so love their food is because they start young.
10 June 2012
Le Pinocchio
If you are on le rocher, Le Pinocchio (note his image on the wall) is a good Italian restaurant for lunch. Always busy. Good food. Friendly waiters. I had a truly excellent clam risotto - and later realised I should have taken a photograph before eating it!
09 June 2012
08 June 2012
Red, not Dead
After Marc Quinn's exhibition at the Oceanographic Museum of skeletons, dead people fornicating over fire and a head made of his blood ... let's look at a live red-blooded Monte Carlo lady.
07 June 2012
Marc Quinn at the Oceanographic Museum - Self
"Self" is a frozen sculpture of the artist's head made from 4.5 litres of his own blood, taken from his body over a period of 5 months. Described by Marc Quinn as a ‘frozen moment on life-support’, the work is carefully maintained in a refrigeration unit, reminding the viewer of the fragility of existence. The artist makes a new version of Self every five years, each of which documents Quinn’s own physical transformation and deterioration.
In 1999, all of Marc Quinn's ‘blood head’ self portraits were exhibited together. Each portrait is a documentation of the artist’s head, as it ages every five years, and so represents a portrait of the artist over a fifteen year period.
06 June 2012
Marc Quinn at the Oceanographic Museum - Zombie Boy (Rick)
Marc Quinn's sculptures are disquieting but beautiful at the same time. Some - many - are scary - at least I found them so.
This piece is called Zombie Boy (Rick) Cu Pb NnFe Mg Si. It's made of orbital-sanded flap-wheeled lacquered bronze and was created in 2011.
Just click on either photo to see the detail which is extraordinary. As I walked past Zombie Boy I felt his eyes following me - in fact I had the strong feeling that perhaps he wasn't a sculpture at all but one of those street people who don't move and then suddenly spring to life.
He is astonishingly beautiful.
Thanks to Philippe who informed me that Zombie Boy is a real person, with real tattoos - do take a look at the link.
05 June 2012
Marc Quinn at the Oceanographic Museum - Fire!
As I said yesterday, this area of the exhibition is forbidden to children unless accompanied by an adult. Whether it's because of the subject matter of the sculptures or because an unaccompanied child and fire could be dangerous, I don't know.
This piece is called Matter into Light: the Discovery of Fire (2011). It's made of hand-treated cobalt-plated bronze, concrete, stainless steel, cement board, ceramic and bioethanol liquid. This is one of a series of burning sculptures which thanks to new technology, can burn with real fire inside the museum without a flue.
04 June 2012
Marc Quinn at the Oceanographic Museum - the Guard
Screens surround the entrance to this space, the Salle de la Baleine, with a notice saying that children may not enter without an accompanying adult. Here you'll find an interesting mix of skeletons that belong to the museum and skeletons created by Marc Quinn, for instance Another Angel. You'll also find a fornicating couple on a bed of fire which I suppose is the reason for the notice. More tomorrow ...
This photo shows the guard on duty bathed in light - I couldn't resist snapping the scene.
03 June 2012
Marc Quinn at the Oceanographic Museum - Coral Nervous Breakdown
02 June 2012
Marc Quinn at the Oceanographic Museum - Evolution
As you walk into the Salon d'Honneur in the Oceanographic Museum you see these 8 enormous sculptures of foetuses which are called Evolution and were created by Marc Quinn between 2005 and 2007.
Take a look a the second photo which shows their size compared to the visitors admiring them.
"The piece Evolution grows under the attentive gaze of Prince Albert I of Monaco, founder of the Oceeanographic Museum, who, in his autobiography, The Career of a Navigator' wrote:
'During my navigator's career I received fromthe sea a few testimonies concerning the laws which determine her role among the forces of the world ... It gave me a serene confidence in that destiny which the balance of the universe imposes upon oganic creatures along with the eternal cycles of life and death.'"
Take a look a the second photo which shows their size compared to the visitors admiring them.
"The piece Evolution grows under the attentive gaze of Prince Albert I of Monaco, founder of the Oceeanographic Museum, who, in his autobiography, The Career of a Navigator' wrote:
'During my navigator's career I received fromthe sea a few testimonies concerning the laws which determine her role among the forces of the world ... It gave me a serene confidence in that destiny which the balance of the universe imposes upon oganic creatures along with the eternal cycles of life and death.'"
01 June 2012
Marc Quinn at the Oceanographic Museum - Another Angel
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