Saturday 31 December 2011

Wash Cycles From Hell


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ Wash Cycles From Hell ~


Wash Cycles From Hell, originally uploaded by Paris Set Me Free.
BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

Or the Interminable Runtime of the Spotless Kind, if you prefer. Maybe this is a particularly Parisian phenomenon; I really couldn't say. Having hermetically sealed off this spotless mind from all non-Parisian artistic or prosaic influences I am unable to determine the extent to which the wash cycle of the automatic Parisian pee-pods is more or less excruciatingly long than in any other modern European city.

How I've come to despise that little blue light with a loathing matched only by the battle of my bladder to hold on until that light turns green and my troubles drain away like... I'll let you choose the appropriate metaphor.

And talking of peeing and metaphors, the French have a wonderful one to describe pointlessness or futility. They say you might as well piss in a violin.

I know, it's good, isn't it? And considering my recurring blue light 'n' bladder problems, I think I'm gonna join the string section and stop whining.

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Friday 30 December 2011

Intercellar Overdrive


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ Intercellar Overdrive ~


Intercellar Overdrive, originally uploaded by Paris Set Me Free.
BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

Who is this mysterious hunched figure in an even more curious place, you wonder. Are we in the vaults of one of the old gothic churches for which the city is so rightly famous? Maybe even the mother of them all, the legendary Notre Dame de Paris? And that hunched figure, that couldn't be... No, it's not possible... Not the... Hunchback of Notre Dame himself?!

No, just some dude like me visiting a house in the Marais, but not just any house. This particular house happens to have a 16th century gothic monastic cellar which was, would you believe it, used by 16th century monastic monks to store stuff in their Parisian pied-de-terre, or city stopping over joint. Baise-en-ville is the less polite version of that term, but they being monks we'll give them the benefit of the doubt.

Their monastery was a hundred Ks out of town, but these self-sufficient souls would bring their surplus wares here to store and sell. So exceptionally well ventilated was it that there wasn't a drop of moisture, and apples would remain in perfectly good condition for a year.

I spent about ten minutes soaking up the atmosphere in this delightful but dilapidated place, currently being renovated by the Paris History association.

For our info they try to save old buildings from being lost and modern monstrosities going up all over Paris, from the grandest to the most modest.

To satisfyingly 'boucle le boucle' (buckle the belt, or complete the circle) as the French would say, I was very happy to see almost the exact same picture as this one from a recent Paris and I blog post on their wall. But coincidences are a bit like luck; they happen more often if you are open for them.

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Thursday 29 December 2011

Share A Little Warmth


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ Share A Little Warmth ~


Share A Little Warmth, originally uploaded by Paris Set Me Free.
BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

It’s a regular evening ritual for me at the moment: arrive at Bibliothèque François Mitterand around 8 or 9 pm. Realise I’ve just missed my train and have 27 minutes to wait. Have a little stroll up top eating chocolate. Head back down to the platform a few minutes before the train is due. Huddle around one of the strangely blinding heat radiating posts found on some of the platforms with a few other homesick souls checking the monitors to make sure the train hasn’t been cancelled and texting home with the latest travel updates.

It’s a funny way to spend one’s time, when you think given another life path we could be lazing on the sand somewhere next to our little bar business in the Caribbean, or rotting in a refugee camp on the Kenya-Somalia border for that matter.

All these people we spend time close to, like this woman on the train about 50 centimetres from me, her legs bracketed by mine, to whom I shall never speak, whose life story I shall never know and whose gaze my eyes may not even meet. We’re sharing the carriage jiggles, and earlier I shared the heat rays with a whole bunch of people, and of course I’m sharing the planet with you all.

Talking of planets, the Earth has discovered a ‘sister’ today, say the papers; a slightly (two and a half?) times bigger thing with the right temperature, around 22°C apparently, to support life, it being around the same distance from its sun. Unfortunately, at 600 light years from us, we 're not able to verify for certain if there is actually life on Kepler-22b, or wave at them if there is. And of course, if we could actually see someone or something waving, they would undoubtedly have been dead for an extremely long time already. Sigh.

So I'll content myself with sharing a few waves of warmth emanating from the Bibliothèque François Mitterand platform E/F heat stick coupled with the odd empathetic curse each time there's a delay announced.

I've noticed they've stopped finishing each misery report on the PA system by thanking us for our understanding, because they know we don't. Now they just say "Thank you... for listening out for more messges." Curse curse... Big Hug!

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Wednesday 28 December 2011

And Dosey Doe Your Partner


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ And Dosey Doe Your Partner ~

BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

I don't know how many time I've titled a post or a poem 'Election Time', but I've got a queasy fealing it's more often than I should have, so I'll refrain.

But anyway, it's almost election time again here in France, and as the tone of the newspapers and TV broadcasts rises to fever pitch we can expect all manner of stupefyingly soporific speeches and assorted nonsense for the next few months. Oh to be a camel, if what they say is true, which apparently it isn't.

Anyway, I've just made the above photo No.3 in my Top 10 Paris Sidewalk Slogans (read about it here), so I won't bore you with all that stuff here, and just say: here's a photo I took a couple of nights ago in the 5th/6th arrondissements of Paris; I hope you like it.

And incitement to commit smiolence isn't one of the worst crimes out there, now is it?

(It looks like he's stealing a big box of ice-cream, no? I wonder what flavour ice-cream he chose? Given the establishment, the choice must have been excrutiatingly difficult - anyone know where it is?)

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Tuesday 27 December 2011

One Way Treat


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ One Way Treat ~


One Way Treat, originally uploaded by Paris Set Me Free.
BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

What we see above is representative of a new trend in Parisian street, ermm, intervention, and this one in particular is in the process of becoming something of a classic, judging by the number of people who have told me about it.

The Paris city council must be despairing and praying to Their Lady Just Across The Way that this one doesn't take off, because it's so quick to do if prepared beforehand and such a pain to go around cleaning up or peeling off afterwards.

Not to mention the fact that you can still understand the sign and the public reaction is generally hugely positive. No harm done.

Most of the street sign perversions are strongly humorous or uplifting, and are a pleasant alternative to some of the less cheerful slogans or simple vandalism carried out in the name of... making a name for yourself. And more often than not they are ingeniously inventive, making use of a utilitarian support to create something new and smile-inducing.

And incitement to commit smiolence isn't one of the worst crimes out there, now is it?

(It looks like he's stealing a big box of ice-cream, no? I wonder what flavour ice-cream he chose? Given the establishment, the choice must have been excrutiatingly difficult - anyone know where it is?)

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Monday 26 December 2011

Nailing Christmas


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ Nailing Christmas ~


Nailing Christmas, originally uploaded by Paris Set Me Free.
BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

The fancy loopy lights of the Champs Élysées had remained a mystery to me until yesterday when I took a trip down there from Trocadero, via the Eiffel Tower.

Splendid. Very well done. In the most pointless coincidence you're likely to hear this year, the French actress Audrey Tautou, who turned them on this year (the lights), was the heroine of the Christmas video we watched when we got home, Le Fabuleux Destin d'Amélie Poulain, which features tons of Paris, although not, as far as I'm aware, the Champs Élysées.

I'm trying to think, but it might be the first time I've done such a thing on Christmas Day. It's amazing how many people had the same idea though. Thousands of them. I mean, how unoriginal. Couldn't they have stayed in and watched the... what do they have in France... the Emperor's speech or something?

Also amazing is how many people were working Christmas Day just like any other.

The Arab-run corner shops I can understand. The cheap-Indian-staffed, bargain basement supermarket chains, fair enough. The Jews don't 'do' Christmas, of course. The Chinese march to the beat of a different drum.

So who does that leave? A bunch of average people overeating and drinking (as if they needed an excuse), millions of snap-happy Japanese tourists grinning all over Lady Eiffel, not forgetting a few adults (and some innocent children) belonging to a group which occasionally gets together to celebrate the achievements of a fictional mass-murderer who massacred, notably, his own son by getting people to hammer nails through his hands and feet and leave him to rot.

Anyway. Call me a traditionalist, but it looks like I'll be sticking with Wallace & Gromit and The Snowman again this year, given that choice. Oh, and Amélie and her beloved Montmartre. How many of your favourite Paris places can you nail?

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Sunday 25 December 2011

Merry Mosquemas


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ Merry Mosquemas ~


Merry Mosquemas, originally uploaded by Paris Set Me Free.
BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

I always feel a bit sorry for all the other religions when one of them is having their annual bash. And I reckon we experience practically every faith and flavour in this city, what with the Chinese New Year, the Sri Lankan Divali thing, Ramadan, Hanukkah, Christmas of course and goodness knows what else. But in the end this pluralistic approach is probably the best way to go while these things are still around, and the openness of most of the communities in allowing others to join in their celebrations proves the point, at least once a year or so.

OK, the crass commercialisation of these events may not be to everyone’s taste, including (and especialy) the official one from these parts, but that’s the way it is, like it or not, so I guess the only thing to do is to enjoy it as much as we can along with the rest of those slogging the sparkling shopping highway, trailing spoilt children’s wishlists through the slushy city streets.

I didn’t have anything particular in mind when I started playing around with this pic, but in retrospect I must have been influenced by all those Christmas trees that keep popping up all over the place with their multi-coloured lights garish displays, although admittedly they have become much more restrained in recent years. But anyway, here’s the Paris mosque lit up like the proverbial Christmas tree and who’s to say it’s not a pretty impressionistic sight? And if you really don’t think so then all I can say is that you're just not entering into the spirit of things – mix and match, take a bit of what pleases you, bless the rest.

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Saturday 24 December 2011

Painting Over The Cracks


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ Painting Over The Cracks ~

BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

A more depressing place you'd be hard-pushed to find. And even though I've grimed up my photo no end, the actual reality is far worse. It's grim.

In case you're wondering, this seems to be some sort of temporary housing provided by the Salvation Army, although I'm only going by the sign at the top and the number of down-in-the-jowl souls going in, out and generally circling around the place.

You know, sometimes colour works. I mean, when you look at the Pompidou Centre, whatever you may think of the thing, you don't automatically associate it with the remains of the day and wrist-slitting.

But on this place it's like a charade; like papering over the cracks. The colours here only go to make the whole sorry spectacle seem a whole lot worse. Who are they trying to kid? Red, yellow and blue? Gayness and jollity? Sunshine and smiles. Come on, let's face it, we're not talking Disneyland here I'm afraid.

This is typical of some of the outlying areas of the city, where progress hasn't yet decided to materialise and we're still stuck in the dire depths of 1960s and 70s architectural monstrosities, begging to be torn down yet still providing some meagre comfort to some of the less fortunate Parisian paupers.

Sorry to put a downer on this Christmas Eve for you if you're reading this, but that's not my intention. As a Paris chronicler and see it as my calling to show all sides of the city, and, ironically, I can see beauty in such an edifice, and ugliness in some pristine modern machinations. It all depends and once again it's all relative - without the one, we couldn't appreciate the other, and it goes both ways. This is our life and our environment. Understanding it is the first step. As to the second, I'm still working on that one.

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Friday 23 December 2011

Cooing For Catalonia


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ Cooing For Catalonia ~


Cooing For Catalonia, originally uploaded by Paris Set Me Free.
BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

Dreaming of Barcelona would be possible on a chilly, rainy Paris street in dreary December just before Christmas I guess. All the more so since I often spend the time of the year in this Catalonian city. But not this year. This poster is probably as close as I'll get to Northern Spanish delights.

Of course, I'm not complaining. There are worse places to be than where I am, much worse. Well, maybe not a lot worse than standing in front of this poster next to a building site in the 13th arrondissement but you know what I mean.

It's funny, when you live in one of the world's most daydream inducing destinations, how do you make the locals dream in order to buy your outta town products.

But then again I'm always amazed by how many Parisians consider London so much more exciting and exotic than Paris. It's a dump! Well, ok, no, but for me the opposite is true. Which just goes to show. Beware of the 'grass is always greener' syndrome.

And what the F is F***book doing up there on a billboard advertising Spanish champagne? Now that's a sign of the times if ever there was one. G**gl* must be gritting their teeth...

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Thursday 22 December 2011

Break Open The Bubbly (Water)


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ Break Open The Bubbly (Water) ~

BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

Still in the depths of darkest Marais night I’m afraid folks, but here’s an image to your warm your heathen hearts: the Mairie of the Marais 4th arrondissement section in Paris. And the traditional Christmas tree. As sponsored by Vittel, I think it is. Vittel? You mean the bottled water company, Sab? That I do, my friends. And what possible interest could a bottled water company have in sponsoring Christmas in the 4th, you may be wondering. Well take a closer look at them thar Christmas trees, and you’ll see why.

Coz they’ve got about as much to do with the mighty majestic pine as a glass of tap water has to do with the Niagara falls. And yet the initiative is admirable and terribly zeitgeist, if I may be so bold.

We’re looking at a new concept in Christmas decorations. Well ok, maybe my parents did (and probably still do) recycle their same, tired old Christmas streamers decade in, decade out, but that’s not what I’m talking about. And don’t get me wrong mum and dad if you’re reading, I loved those darned things and getting the Christmas box down from the attic once again every December with the delicious anticipation of all the exciting things to come for a young one…

But as I said, this is a different kind of recycling. Despite the fact that these water bottles look suspiciously shiny and new, all with the very same outward facing twist to them and not a scrap of a label in sight, those less cynical than I will no doubt laud praise on this worthy initiative. A publicity stunt, of course, but hopefully publicity for the right reasons for once. May the festivities begin!

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Wednesday 21 December 2011

Welcome To The Underworld


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ Welcome To The Underworld ~

BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

Weirdest thing. I hope you wouldn't expect any less.

Walking down the road in an, ok, not exactly mainstream part of town, and what should I see...

Well yes, exactly, 'what' is the operative word here. Stuck on the edge of the sidewalk is what can only be refered to as 'a structure' of some sort. In all my years in Paris, I'd never seen anything quite like it. Or even vaguely like it.

Maybe it's a one-off; I don't know. But what I did know was that it was worth further investigation. So I further investigated.

The results of my further investigations will be shared with my inner circle of Paris freaks shortly - feel free to join us any time!

But in the meantime, know this: it's impressively emblazoned with the arms of Paris; the top opens, and you can just about look down into... something; and it's one hell of an ugly brown, but then again, a lot of things are.

See you in the underworld!

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Tuesday 20 December 2011

Bags of Time


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ Bags of Time ~


Bags of Time, originally uploaded by Paris Set Me Free.
BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

Ahh, Christmas. People struggling home laden down with bags of goodies for all the family. What a fortune we spend at this time of year. And on so much crap.

My son is spoilt to death. For his second birthday he received so many presents that in the end he had a fit because he just wanted to carry on playing with some old toy from nine months ago.

We all desperately want to give others pleasure. All at the same time and all just a little bit more than the others. We seem to need that reaffirmation of our goodness, and our worth is counted in delighted looks and hurried hugs.

And of course the market desperately wants us to buy their latest must-have stuff. Most of it eminently mustn't-shouldn't-needn't have at all.

We're all brainwashed and spoilt, spoilt also in the sense of rotten apples. We've lost our perspective in this queasy sea of subliminal images and unsubtle ramming of buy buy buy (NOW, before it's TOO LATE!) exhortations. Don't be satisfied with what you've got; that's so last year; look what we've got for you this year - it looks the same, does the same thing but it's so, so much better!

You know what I'm going to do? I'm going to take a hundred euros out with me on Christmas day this year and wander the streets of the city and talk to some of the homeless people, and slip them handfuls of coins. I'm not going to give them unwanted, eco-friendly, bio-regeneratable bunk. Just a handful of coins to see what happens. But I'll have a chat with them too. Just yesterday, I think it was, a woman saw me getting on the train and standing by the door.

Another stoopid victim (yours truly), I thought, as she wavered up to me. I listened to her story passively but with my usual internal scepticism, until I'd heard enough to believe she was genuine. You can see the genuine ones. See and smell (not good) and feel (empathetically, much stronger) the ones who aren't acting.

Stories of aids and operations (with visuals) and watery looks and lost families and pleading, rotten-tooth smiles. You can't fake that.

And you can't fake the two-handed clutch of your hand after you've succumbed and offered. And in the end it's not really the money they want. Well, it is, but also. Also the human touch. Did I recoil from that double-handed, black-nailed clasp? Whether I did or not my reaction was overwhelmed by the gratitude of this lady. And as usual by my shame for, well, what? Having a better life than her? I shouldn't be ashamed of that, should I? What then? At not giving or 'clasping' more often? That's probably it.

I saw a programme the other day on the Bains Publics de Paris, and the people who work there. They've seen a lot. But most of all they've seen human beings, made friends and helped those who are less fortunate than themselves, even if it involves slopping out their slimy weekly showers.

There's a humility and purity to that, I reckon.

I know people close to me who scoff at giving to such and such a charity because it all goes to line the pockets of the very wrong people. No, they claim, they'd much rather go out into the streets and serve soup to the cold and hungry, as they used to do, they insist, with a certain smug pride. Only, the last time they actually did that was... well, they can't quite remember. Convenient excuses. And we need these excuses to protect ourselves from what we know isn't right: fellow human beings sitting in metro stations wrapped in rags surrounded by a million plastic bags.

If she hadn't been there I might well have sat in that very seat. Are we really that distant? Are the invisible barriers we build really so sacredly unbreakable? Much as religion saddens me, at least it occasionally compels some of its followers to get off their backsides and actually help others for no other reason than that we theoretically should.

I don't know. Maybe I won't do my Christmas Day Good Samaritan act. Maybe sloth and avarice will get the better of me once again, and just think how many more pieces of useless, unwanted junk I could add to my two-year-old's mountain of madness this year with €100!

I'm being honest with you. It's only a blog post. And the last thing I'd want is for people to think I was putting this story here with the aim of people thinking, wow, what a worthy guy! That's the absolutely worst kind of giving: 'Look At Me' Giving. So I'll say it again: I probably won't. In fact, I'm more frightened of the smiles and the clasps than anything else. The exaggerated gratitude for something as throwaway as a euro kind of sticks in the craw. And craws are sensitive.

So anyway, where was I? Oh yes: iPad 2 or iPhone 4S, hmm, let me see... oh hang it, I'll get both...

Further down, a photo booth, a million plastic bags
And an old woman filling out a million baggage tags
But when she gets thrown out, three bags at a time
She spies the old chap in the road to share her bags with
She has bags of time


~ from 'One Better Day' by Madness

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.

Monday 19 December 2011

Come To Metro Country


iPhone Photo Chronicles
~ Come To Metro Country ~


Come To Metro Country, originally uploaded by Paris Set Me Free.
BONUS: For Street Photography Fans!

facebook.com/streetphotographysecrets

While few of us weary trottoir traipsers consciously notice the sublimely subliminal art nouveau 'M' as we head home heads down, far fewer of us suspect its far from innocent origins.

It's true that McDonalds now sponsor a large number of the Paris metro stations with their omnipresent big yellow 'M', but that's not it at all.

No, in fact there's another, far hazier side to the story, involving a company with a vested interest in slipping their smoky 'M' down your so far subconscious throat. Now who could that be?

In a time when openly promoting their wares, if not yet consuming them, is illegal, these wiley marketers will find countless clever ways to place their products, on your backs, under your feet and even on the most unsuspected aspects of this great city's cultural heritage.

Honestly, the renovation of Paris' splendid Hector Guimard metro entrances, now sponsored by the 'M' that dare not splutter its name; who'd have believed it ;~?

_________________________________________________________________________________
© 2011
Sab Will / Paris Set Me Free - Contact me directly for photo tours, interviews, exhibitions, etc.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...