Outside the Café de Paris. The waiter stands outside the window from which seafood is served - lobsters, langoustines, oysters, sea urchins, prawns etc. The people you see sitting are taking simply a coffee or a cold drink.
Lunch is served either inside the restaurant with its beautiful Art Nouveau panels or in an area along from here and much further back.
These are a few of the many good 'people-watching' tables - one of the pleasures of taking a coffee in Monaco.
15 November 2009
14 November 2009
Threesome
13 November 2009
12 November 2009
The Port of Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat - the Crab
11 November 2009
The Port of Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat - the Manoeuvre
10 November 2009
The Port of Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat - Le Pirate
Lunch for this lady and her partner - but first, a glass of champagne.
My restaurant recommendation for Saint Jean would be Le Sloop, but it was closed. We chose Le Pirate - just a few yards away, a much cheaper restaurant but with the same idyllic view of the boats right by our table and good food too.
We ate from a 22 euro menu. Pissaladière for one of us to begin, chèvre chaud for the other - both served with a well-dressed salad of lamb leaves and roquette. And after we both had a prawn risotto. A Provence rosé to drink.
09 November 2009
08 November 2009
The Port of Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat - the Restaurants
We've arrived in the small port of Saint Jean on Cap Ferrat. Let's stroll along the port and find somewhere to eat lunch. We'll look at the menus, see if a place looks busy - and then decide. Let's hope we make a good decision.
This father walked up and down, up and down. I suppose he was trying to rock his baby to sleep.
07 November 2009
Villa Kérylos - One Last Look
06 November 2009
Villa Kérylos - the Working Man
Copyright 2009 Monte Carlo Daily Photo. All rights reserved.
Like all famous houses open to the public, Villa Kérylos needs an immense amount of tender loving care. This post is dedicated to Chuckeroon of Richmond-upon-Thames Daily Photo who recently posted on 'The Working Man' at Ham House. Please click on the link.
Of course, to match Chuckeroon's passion, the photo should be Black and White but with the Mediterranean outside the window, I couldn't do it.
Tomorrow - our last day at the Villa and then...lunch at the port of Saint Jean on Cap Ferrat. Everyone welcome!
Like all famous houses open to the public, Villa Kérylos needs an immense amount of tender loving care. This post is dedicated to Chuckeroon of Richmond-upon-Thames Daily Photo who recently posted on 'The Working Man' at Ham House. Please click on the link.
Of course, to match Chuckeroon's passion, the photo should be Black and White but with the Mediterranean outside the window, I couldn't do it.
Tomorrow - our last day at the Villa and then...lunch at the port of Saint Jean on Cap Ferrat. Everyone welcome!
05 November 2009
Villa Kérylos -the Garden
From this part of the garden we look across to the Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat peninsula, dotted with magnificent mansions.
The garden contains a mixture of typically Greek plants: olive trees and vines, pomegranate and carob trees, acanthus and myrtle, oleanders and irises, pine and cypress trees, palm trees and papyrus all help create a Grecian look and feel in the Mediterranean sunshine.
04 November 2009
Villa Kérylos - the Gallery of Antiques
Copyright 2009 Monte Carlo Daily Photo. All rights reserved.
Located at sea level, the “Galerie des Antiques” is a collection of life-size casts of the finest classical Grecian statues, such as the famous Belvedere Apollo, the Venus de Milo and the Discobolus, the originals of which are in Rome, Florence, Naples and the Louvre museum.
Visitors can see statues of the ancient gods and goddesses who played such an important part in Greek civilisation: Aphrodite, Athena, Artemis, Apollo and Ares.
Located at sea level, the “Galerie des Antiques” is a collection of life-size casts of the finest classical Grecian statues, such as the famous Belvedere Apollo, the Venus de Milo and the Discobolus, the originals of which are in Rome, Florence, Naples and the Louvre museum.
Visitors can see statues of the ancient gods and goddesses who played such an important part in Greek civilisation: Aphrodite, Athena, Artemis, Apollo and Ares.
03 November 2009
Villa Kérylos - the Triklinos
Copyright 2009 Monte Carlo Daily Photo. All rights reserved.
In every room there are frescoes and mosaics inspired by ancient documents, depicting scenes from Greek mythology. Visitors can see the death of Talos after winning the Golden Fleece, the return of Hephaestus to Olympia and the main events in the legend of Pelops and the life of Apollo.
The frescoes in these photos are presented as a frieze in the Triklinos, which is the banqueting hall of the villa.
In every room there are frescoes and mosaics inspired by ancient documents, depicting scenes from Greek mythology. Visitors can see the death of Talos after winning the Golden Fleece, the return of Hephaestus to Olympia and the main events in the legend of Pelops and the life of Apollo.
The frescoes in these photos are presented as a frieze in the Triklinos, which is the banqueting hall of the villa.
02 November 2009
Villa Kérylos - the Balaneion
01 November 2009
Theme Day: 'Doorways' - the Prince's Palace
Copyright 2009 Monte Carlo Daily Photo. All rights reserved.
It's Theme Day again and the subject is 'doorways' and in Monaco, why not the doorway to the Prince's Palace on le rocher? And a second doorway - this time the doorway to one of the sentry boxes.
To see how at least 100 City Daily Photo bloggers from around the world have interpreted today's Theme, do click on the link to be delighted and intrigued. Click here to view thumbnails for all participants.
To see how at least 100 City Daily Photo bloggers from around the world have interpreted today's Theme, do click on the link to be delighted and intrigued. Click here to view thumbnails for all participants.
31 October 2009
Villa Kérylos - a Room with a View
30 October 2009
Villa Kérylos - the Bird Room
29 October 2009
Villa Kérylos - the Foot
28 October 2009
Villa Kérylos - the Triptolème
This is a detail of the Triptolème, a small rest room between two bathrooms in the Villa Kérylos.
Far from being a mere copy of the noble houses on the Greek island of Delos, Villa Kérylos is rather a reinvention of
ancient Greece. The architect, Emmanuel Pontremoli, did not want to make a pastiche but chose to create an original work with “Greece in mind”. He demonstrated his genius by subtly incorporating the modern conveniences of the
Belle Époque villas into the luxurious setting of an ancient Greek villa.
27 October 2009
Villa Kérylos - the Central Courtyard
Copyright 2009 Monte Carlo Daily Photo. All rights reserved.
Villa Kérylos was built in the early 1900s, in the period the French call the “Belle Epoque”, and is a unique and luxurious re-creation of an ancient Grecian dwelling of the second century B.C., complete with wall decorations and furniture.
Built by two great enthusiasts of Ancient Greece: Theodore Reinach, an archaeologist and patron of the arts, and Emmanuel Pontremoli, an inspired architect.
In keeping with many Mediterranean houses, the Villa Kérylos is built around a “peristyle”, a vast central courtyard surrounded by twelve monolithic columns in white Carrera marble. It was here that Theodore Reinach loved to take a walk.
Villa Kérylos was built in the early 1900s, in the period the French call the “Belle Epoque”, and is a unique and luxurious re-creation of an ancient Grecian dwelling of the second century B.C., complete with wall decorations and furniture.
Built by two great enthusiasts of Ancient Greece: Theodore Reinach, an archaeologist and patron of the arts, and Emmanuel Pontremoli, an inspired architect.
In keeping with many Mediterranean houses, the Villa Kérylos is built around a “peristyle”, a vast central courtyard surrounded by twelve monolithic columns in white Carrera marble. It was here that Theodore Reinach loved to take a walk.
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