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Paris is one of the most photographed and photogenic cities on the planet. With a little pocket camera I arrived to record my first ever visit. Converting my prints to digital, and despite scanning at the highest resolution available, the imperfections of these shots became more obvious. I decided to use post processing software to sharpen them, with even sadder results ... and then I applied a watercolour filter. The almost impressionist results were magic. Judge for yourself.

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Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Paris - Place du Tertre - 18e


Plate XCI Place du Tertre
I confess I had no idea what a tertre was, or why one should have its own Place. So I looked it up. Well, a tertre is hillock, a heap or a mound. Now Montmartre is more correctly named Butte Montmartre and so I looked up precisely what my old school dictionary has to say about about a butte. You guessed then? A butte too is defined as a mound, knoll or hillock (or the butts behind a target on a shooting range). That’s it then - no more mystery - this simply is the square of the hillock or the Butte Montmartre. It certainly is the centre of life in this district, lying a few short streets away from the Basilica of Sacre Coeur and within shouting distance of the Lapin Agile. Surrounded by relaxed colourful and delightfully lively eateries (or drinkeries depending on your choice of refreshment) it is here that the artists of the area set up their easels daily to paint your portrait or their beloved city sights, and to sell their wares. It is here that you may have your profile cut out by a silhouette-caricaturist if you stand stationery for more than a few seconds. The art work varies from good quality works in oil (and priced accordingly) to the churned out commercial stuff that looks like a million mass-printed table place mats that have already familiarised you with the city scenes in the souvenir shops in the city centre. I never did work out how negotiable the artists’ prices are, but I do suspect that the one who implied I’d grossly insulted him (and his entire ancestry) by trying to negotiate his asking price down, was simply using that as his negotiation strategy to see who blinked first. If so it cost him the sale, and as you will have seen I have more ‘paintings’ of the city today than I’d ever imagined possible!! If the Basilica is the Sacre Coeur de Paris, the Place du Tertre is unquestionably the Coeur de Montmartre. No visit to Paris is complete until I’ve had  ‘des verres de rouge’ here. A votre santé!
When you have finished at the Place du Tetre be sure to visit the nearby l’Espace Salvador Dali, a museum mostly dedicated mainly to the work of the Spanish surrealist.

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