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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, August 24, 2010

Paris - Grand Gardens and Canal - Versailles

 
Plate CXII -The Grand Gardens and Canal
While visiting the palace and some of the surrounding attractions it had already been intermittently raining. Nothing too dramatic, but by my judgement of the sky it would be safe to begin a walk around the five and a half kilometer perimeter of the Grand Canal, with possibly a few diversions along the way.
From this position in front of the Bassin de Latone one gets a beautiful view of the canal beyond the ‘tapis vert’ that lends scale and perspective to the view. The fountain dating from 1670 depicts a scene from classical Greek literature, where Latona and her children are being tormented by mud slung at them by Lycian peasants. An obvious parallel is drawn between this event and the revolts of the Fronde in the time of Louis XIV. Mud slinging continues to be a popular political pastime!!
The Grand Canal once served as a venue for royal boating events. At some 1500 metres in length and over 60 metres wide it extends the east to west axis view of the park. At the junction of the north to west canal transverse lies an area known as Little Venice, used originally to house gondolas (and their gondoliers) a gift of the Doge of Venice.  The canal collected waters from the myriad fountains of the park, which was then recirculated using a system of windmills and pumps. The supply of water to the spectacular fountains, best seen during an event known as the Grand Eaux is a marvel of water engineering and a continuing challenge to this day.
I was no more than a kilometre into my walk around the canal when the most almighty storm broke loose. I seemed to have been alone in my foolishness of taking a stroll in the mid afternoon of this day. I knew that severe storms in 1990 had most recently destroyed and battered many of the ancient trees of the gardens. From the experience I had this day I can fully understand the nature of what was to prove an even worse catastrophe in 1999 when reportedly thousands of trees, some dating back to Napoleonic and supposedly Louis XVI times were destroyed. It was the worst such storm damage in the history of the Versailles gardens necessitating the fifth recorded re-plantation of the trees.

Contemplating this, and still wondering what the car hire company made of the sight of the saturated being who returned their slightly damp (interior) vehicle, I guess I was just lucky ……

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