Saturday, 2 January 2016
Hello!
Wow, what a day!
Today was scheduled for an all-day rain, and it looks like that’s just
about all it did! Our day started by
taking the shopping caddy with all of our miscellaneous and extraneous goods
(the Minion bank, the Minion nightlight, the Minion Kleenex, scarves, shirts,
cards, calendars and our latest French road atlas) to La Poste to send back to the U.S.
(It was SO dark, even at 9 a.m. because of the rain clouds!) Of course we were early [typical! – R] … and
had to wait in a downpour for about 10 minutes before the door was opened. However, the benefit of being the first to
arrive is that we really had La Poste
all to ourselves! We managed to cram
everything into a large postal “if-it-fits-it-ships” box, and it is now on its
way to our neighbors Bob and Stew. SO nice to know that we will easily fall
within the Ryan Air luggage requirements, that’s for sure! The French road atlas must have weighed
several pounds all on its own.
Back to the flat, to discuss our plans for the day.We had intended to track down the Traboules in Croix Rousse, across the Saone, but with the weather so wet, we
changed our minds, and decided to spend an “indoor” day at the Musee des Confluences. We had driven past it on Wednesday, coming
back from Nathalie’s, and the building itself is spectacular; very, very
modern, but really quite beautiful. I
was thinking that maybe we should wait until Tuesday (they are closed on
Monday) so that kids would be back in school and parents would be back at work,
but the prospect of a nice indoor day was too good to pass up.
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| Outside and under museum |
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| Looking from the main entryway |
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| Looking down from 2nd floor |
So! Out into the rain
(wearing our black shoes now, as tennies have WAY too many holes in them) and over to the C3 bus to the T1
tramway. Finally, off the T1 at the
museum stop. Even though we weren’t
there at opening time (they open at 10 am on Saturday, and it was probably closer
to 11 by the time we got there!) the line really wasn’t too long. We probably had to wait about 15 minutes to
get through security and get our tickets; not a problem.
First, I have to say that while we have seen some
interesting architecture around the world, this may have been our first deconstructivist building ever. [Just what
does deconstructivist mean? – R] As that source of all knowledge, Wikipedia
says:
The Musée des
Confluences is a science centre and anthropology museum which opened on
20 December 2014 in the 2nd arrondissement of Lyon, (Rhône), France. Presqu'île
at the confluence of the Rhône and the Saône, adjacent to Autoroute A7, and
comprises part of a larger redevelopment project of the Confluence quarter of
Lyon. The deconstructivist architectural design, said to resemble a floating
crystal cloud of stainless steel and glass, was created by the Austrian firm Coop
Himmelb(l)au.
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| Menhir from temporary exhibit |
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| Knife blades and gold jewelry |
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| Pyrenees jade |
It is
located at the southern tip of the
Actually, that’s really not a bad description of what we
found!
The museum houses both temporary
exhibits as well as a permanent collection, and we were very surprised at some
of the things that we found.
There is a
temporary exhibition encompassing “wealth and luxury” in the Neolithic age.
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| From Machine exhibit |
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| More interesting machines ... |
There were examples of jewelry, weapons as
well as a wonderful menhir from Brittany.
As I told Robert, the problem is that now we have museums that we need
to see in Carcassonne, Toulouse, Bordeaux and Nantes.
Obviously, they will never end!
There was also an interesting exhibit about man and “the
machine” starting literally about the time that the industrial revolution was
taking place, and encompassing such things as trains and train stations to
airplanes, radios and televisions. There
was a very strong “fine art” component, mixing flat art – oils and pastels,
with sculptured pieces made out of machine parts.
On the permanent exhibit floor, we found some wonderful
displays about the rise of homo sapiens
as well as the corresponding animals, birds and insects. This collection even covered the start of
writing, and had a small but very nice Cuneiform collection.
All in all, a very good place to visit, especially on a
rainy day!
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| My tarte citron |
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| R's cheese quiche |
We covered the temporary
exhibits on the first floor before heading upstairs to the lunch
restaurant.
(They have a formal
brasserie, but it looked to us like we would have had to go outside to get to
it, and we didn’t really want to stand in line at security all over
again!)
There we were able to get quiche
– R had cheese, and I had onion – and I followed mine by a
tarte citron, which was great!
Then it was back to the second floor, and the permanent exhibits.
We finally finished up around 3:30 pm and headed back to the
flat to regroup.
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| Outside, 4th floor |
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| Looking down interior staircase |
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| Entering mammal exhibit |
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| Do love that building! |
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| Heading down toward the confluence |
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| Swans and me at the confluence of Rhone & Saone! |
However, it being
Saturday today, and Sunday tomorrow, I knew that most of the grocery stores
would be closed tomorrow, and we needed to get something in for dinner tomorrow
night.
So, I walked back across the
Saone to the
Presqu’ile Market and
picked up some fresh pasta and sauce, which we will have for dinner
tomorrow.
(I’m thinking Indian possibly
for tonight!)
So, for the moment’s that’s about it! Tomorrow hopefully will be better weather,
and we will give the Croix Rousse
area another try!
Lots of love,
m
xxx
Love the museum building - what a cool place!
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