The Historic Heart of Paris

Another sun scorched day in Paris – apparently bad weather is coming but we’ve yet to see a hint of it. Took advantage of the sun and did a historic walk through the very centre of Paris, using Rick Steves’ excellent audio tour. This area of town had a lot more pedestrian streets and a surprising abundance of parks – an excellent place to stay especially if in town for only a few days.

First stop – the Cathedral of Notre Dame. What the building lacked in hunchbacks it made up for in definitive Gothic architecture – this is the building that started the movement and it did it with style!

We then left the small island that houses the cathedral, an island that has been at the very centre of Paris for over 2000 years, and headed to the left bank to see remnants of Medieval architecture, some interesting cultural icons like a famous bookshop that houses aspiring writers and first published James Joyce’s Ulysses (Shakespeare and Co), and explored the Latin Quarter, named after its roots in University culture, not a tendency towards all things Latino. In the same quarter we ate our very first French crepes (delicious!! Marthese opted for Nutella Crepe for desert, of course.)

We returned to the island to visit St Chappelle – a medieval church we hadn’t heard of but an absolute must-visit! The place felt so warm compared to Notre Dame, with its remarkably huge stained glass window panels. A real marvel.

Right next door to St Chappelle is Paris’ major courthouse which is still in use, and was used to pass down fatal rulings following the French Revolution.

And right next door to that is the Conciergerie, one of the older palaces in Paris that was converted into a prison during the reign of the major kings and then used to imprison kings and nobility following the revolution. There is a reconstruction of Marie-Antoinette’s cell, a stark contrast to her gardens of fantasy that we visited yesterday.

Finally we ended the tour on the Pont Neuf, France’s oldest standing bridge, and a great place to sit and watch the river Seine and ponder Paris’ vast history. Or just sit in the sun with your new wife.

Tez and I then parted ways – she to H & M, where she had much shopping success, and me to a couple of extra museums.

The Cluny Museum is a medieval building that displays a bunch of medieval artefacts – lots of Christian art and such. Some of the notable items were original stained-glass pieces from St Chappelle that you could look at up close, the decapitated heads of biblical kings from the Notre Dame cathedral following the rampage of some over-enthusiastic revolutionaries, and some very fancy tapestry work that seem to imply that Unicorns are real and they’re French. I enjoyed the visit, but I would not call it an essential destination.

The Pompidou, however, was awesome. A strange inside-out building that features Paris’ Museum of Modern Art, I’m glad I found time to squeeze it in. The modern art exhibition was extensive – hundreds of epic 20th century artworks spanning multiple art movements and art-forms on a single level. Works by Picasso, Kandinsky, Bacon, Duchamp, Dali, Pollock are exhibited alongside works of far lesser known artists, even literally unknown artists, but all form a strong impression of a period or movement. It was totally engrossing and overwhelming at the same time. I found some surprising and inspiring works by people I’d not heard of before (like Matta and Kertesz) that I’m keen to follow up on.

Sadly the contemporary art exhibition is closed for the next month, and I was too tired to visit any of the temporary exhibitions.

Returned to my wife. We’re hopefully off to some sort of fancy dinner tonight. Should be fun!

Click here for more photos from Paris Day 6.

Click here for the full Paris album.

How to Make Lasagne Arab Style – by Khaled Mariam

WARNING: All videos linked to in this post are full of LOLs.

The Zyzz of Cooking is a comedy cooking show made by Khaled Mariam from Western Sydney. CuriousWorks has worked with Khaled on several projects over the last few years, so its fantastic to see him making his own hilarious films and posting them! Check out the video on Youtube and subscribe! Looking forward to more!!

Khaled was previously part of the reFILL project which ran at Miller Technology High and CuriousWorks facilitated from 2008-2009. You can see Khaled’s work in short film Attack of the Bullies or featured in the reFILL Sketch Comedy Videos. In 2010 he also played the main role in a short film for the Digitalogic program, Art Class Anti-Stimulus.

Digital Mantelpiece: Planning Week

Digital_mantelpiece-header1

CuriousWorks sent me to Hobart last week to work with Glenorchy City Council's Moonah Arts Centre planning the "Digital Mantelpiece" program. This program will give local artists and residents an opportunity to share personal stories expressed through video, poetry, audio and photos which will be exhibited at the gallery and on a special online platform. We'll also be building up digital media skills in the area with the hopes of the project becoming an ongoing and sustainable one.

The week involved meeting and visioning sessions with Moonah Arts Centre staff, and meeting with project partners at the Goodwood Community Centre and Glenorchy LINC (part of the state-wide Library network.) We were able to gather lots of information about the community and the local needs and resources, so that we could build an appropriate community engagement and skills development model.??

I met collaborating artists Troy Melville and Karen Knight. Troy is a local filmmaker with years of experience in broadcast and community engagement. Karen is a local poet with many published works (found myself reading her books throughout the week instead of putting my head down and working!) We're very excited to be collaborating with these two artists, we're gonna be making and facilitating awesome shit!!

I also had the pleasure of sitting in on a Glenorchy Arts & Culture Advisory Committee meeting where I got to hear about future plans for the area as well as share what CuriousWorks does and what Digital Mantelpiece was starting to look like. Local Independent MP Andrew Wilkie was also present at the meeting, making it a bit special! I'm hoping to meet at least one Tasmanian celebrity per trip. Tick!

A huge thanks to Eleanor Downes, Michael McLaughlin and Sean Kelly from Glenorchy City Council who were warm and accommodating with their time, and brought three very distinct and passionate visions to the project planning. The Digital Mantelpiece project acknowledges the generous support of both Arts Tasmania and the Australia Council for the Arts' Community Partnerships Program, and community partners Goodwood Community Centre, Glenorchy LINC, Migrant Resource Centre Southern Tasmania and U3A Glenorchy.??

Some other cool trip highlights:

– Michael brought me along to a very cool meeting at Wide Angle in Salamanca, where local filmmakers and representatives from Roar Film and Screen Tasmania sat to discuss the state of documentary filmmaking in Australia.??

– Didn't get a chance to check out MONA this trip (definitely next trip!) but had a walk around the Salamanca Markets and Battery Point (took some mobile pics).

Looking forward to my next visit in June, when things will be well underway!

(Props to Mark for the cool quick banner design!)

It’s a Dance-Off!

Second workshop at the Street Uni today with lots of pre-production
brainstorming, voting and heated discussions involving car accidents,
Katy Perry & a drunk clown. The results – our video and poster will be
based around a Dance-Off. Hell yeah. The Street University should be
the perfect setting.

The Responsible Use of Alcohol Digital Artworks program is an
initiative by Liverpool City Council in partnership with CuriousWorks,
4 schools and 2 youth organisations.

First workshops at the Street University Liverpool went down on Friday

On Friday we held our first ever CuriousWorks workshops at the Street University, Liverpool. A group of 10 girls from Miller Technology High joined in our first workshops for the Responsible Use of Alcohol Digital Artworks program in partnership with Liverpool City Council.

An awesome fun first session, the girls shot and edited a video (yet another ball game) which we'll hopefully be able to publish when permissions come through. Starting next week we get to the serious work – working on our poster and video creations!