It’s one of those great (and gray) September mornings in Paris and I take my poor jet lagged body out to take pictures of a city that looks more majestic without its occupants or tourists like me!
I would like to take you with me; first we take the bus:
the streets are all empty—one of the oldest surviving buildings in Paris from the 16th century:
even the marché is not open yet,
Saint Michel is unrecognizable at 7 am:
the cafés are just opening,
walking along the river bank in Isle Saint Louis,
Notre Dame is majestically melancholic,
but pretty soon, life starts in the city:
I decide to go towards the Marais; I am surprised to see a Pain Quotidien on my way—so far from Brentwood and Westwood but exactly the same menu:
rushing towards Place des Vosges, the street signs stop me:
its’ too early in the morning for gooseberries,
I really need a strong coffee,
but of course the waitress cleans up the street and not the table left from the previous clients,
the galleries around the square are too commercial but I am glad to discover a painter from Rafsandjan, Reza Sarrafi, in one of the windows:
the wine paintings are from another painter, Annekov:
Voilà! Now you know.
I am not kidding when I say I love this city—here are my other posts about Paris:
Giacometti, a post from Montparnasse