Monday, I was sitting on a platform in the back of an old foundry in Paris overlooking what is now known as Atelier des Lumières. The Atelier is the first digital art museum in Paris. I have gone five times since it opened its doors in April of 2018. All the shows are a combination of Art and Technology. Using 120 projectors, images are thrown up on walls and the floor. They are in constant motion and accompanied by music.
After watching a show of Cezanne, Kandinsky, and Van Gogh, I decided I wanted to know more about the origins of the Atelier des Lumières. As each of the shows ended and the credits were projected on the walls, eight cities (including Paris) now house these light shows: Bordeaux, Les Baux-de-Province, Amsterdam, New York, Dubai, Seoul, and Jeju. That is six more than the last time I was there during the summer of 2020. My sister had told me she had tickets to see the Van Gogh show in Detroit (for five times the price we pay here in Paris!). I had assumed it was the Paris show that was traveling but I’m not so sure. There is a permanent installation in New York.
The first of these art and technology shows, Carrières des Lumières, started in les Baux-de-Province. There the art is projected onto the walls of caves. It is part of a much larger organization called Cultural Spaces. Bruno Monnier, the president of Cultural Spaces, wanted to bring the idea to Paris. He found an unused foundry from the 19th century called Chemin-Vert located in the 11th arrondissement. It was created in 1835 to meet the needs of the Navy and railways for high-quality castings. It closed in 1929 due to the International crisis. Monnier has taken the space, left it intact, and cleaned it up while fitting it for all the projectors. It opened in 2018 with a show of Klimpt’s famous paintings. It is hard to describe the show if you haven’t seen one. My photos are static but the images are constantly moving like a giant slide show. Music is chosen specifically for certain periods in an artist’s life. The result is captivating. It’s not a stretch to call it a completely immersive experience. Children often run around chasing the images on the floor and become part of the fun of the show.
After writing the above, I walked to Parc de Bagatelle to check on the peacocks and the cats. I couldn’t go on Sunday. I saw how fast the peacock tails were growing in. I thought of sitting in the Atelier watching these famous artists’ depictions of nature dancing on the walls. And, of being in Bagatelle week after week, looking at the trees turn colors, the roses die away, a few defying nature and hanging on to their stems, the peacocks strutting around, their tails growing so fast it just might be a slide show. There is no sign of the females. There aren’t even that many people even though it was a lovely autumn day. The cats were all out enjoying the warmth of the sun.
The regular volunteer was just finishing up feeding time for the cats. I asked him how long it took the peacock tails to complete the circle to full growth. He said April. They molt in August. Four months is the short time they are full and probably the equivalent of mating season.
I asked him about kittens. He said most are born between September and December. We never see them because the mothers hide them in the thick bushes on the periphery of the park. I had visions of bushwacking my way through those bushes until I found a litter. Then I’d steal one and raise it—much to the chagrin of Bijou who is the true Lady and Mistress of my small apartment. A girl can dream.
Being at Bagatelle week after week is as immersive an experience as the digital art show at the Atelier. One shouldn’t compare apples and oranges but, if I were forced to choose…..
A bientôt,
Sara
Love your posts. I saw the Van Gogh here in Raleigh a couple of months ago. It was so highly touted I have to admit I was a trifle disappointed, but it was pretty amazing. When I lived in Paris, the Son et Lumieres was just getting started (late 70's). I was with a sort of competitor, a fireworks company. It was quite different, though, from what it is now. Quite a success story!!
I love your statement: but if I were forced to choose. . .and it made me so glad that I am not forced to choose. The natural world has it's amazing power of healing, and luminosity that (in my opinion) no digital creation can match. But the creations of humans are awe-inspiring. I just watched a video on Tony Cragg, sculptor from England, now a resident of Berlin, talking about his show on right now in Vienna. I listened to him speak about his work, and still could not grasp the intelligence and knowledge of materials he brings to the sculptural space, as his world of experience is so far beyond my own in his arena. Thanks to the digital accomplishments of humans, I can sit in Pennsylvania on my computer, read your post, watch Tony Cragg standing among his creations and learn from both of you the joy of living and creating. Then I can get up and go outside to my Pennsylvania farmstead and see the incredible autumn beauty we are experiencing this fall (after a summer of drought), as well as go walking in the woods behind my house where there are no other houses, roads, or people within my sight and be gloriously alone among the tall trees with their falling leaves. What a world, what a life.
thanks, again, Sara--always look forward to your beautiful writing.