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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Visiting the Tintin - Herge Museum in Brabant, Belgium with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Visiting the Tintin - Herge Museum in Brabant, Belgium with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

During a visit to the Les Secrets de Moulinsart exhibit at the Château de Cheverny in France, I picked up a brochure for the Hergé Museum in Louvain-le-Neuve outside Brussels, Belgium.

Ever since I studied French-language literature for children and francophone children’s culture to become a French teacher in the 1990s, I have wanted to understand Hergé, the creator of the Tintin comic books better.  The Hergé Museum was one of the first stops we made on a weekend vacation during the summer of 2012.

The museum is rich in panels of cartoon page drafts that allow you to understand the multiple sketches that went into the creation of a single page when Hergé was a cartoonist.  As you work your way through the French-language exhibits, you learn about the newspapers that Hergé worked for; Le Vingtième Siècle and Le Soir.  Both newspapers were Catholic and sought to have a leisure section for young people that Hergé filled with Tintin or other comic strips.  Most of Hergé’s comic books started as comic strips in these newspapers.

Hergé was not a wealthy illustrator at the beginning of his career.  The second gallery following the tour is decorated with his work for the advertising industry.  Both his advertising and comic strip work make use of techniques such as speed lines to indicate motion, the interplay of angles to focus the eye, and color to incite emotion among other techniques to focus viewer attention on use of products or product placements in attractive surroundings.

My favorite gallery was devoted to the influence of cinema on Hergé’s work.  Books for each decade of his work were set out on tables in this gallery.  It was interesting to see how Hergé could speed up a sequence by showing one long frame on line, then two frames on the next line, and finally three frames on the last line.  The same sequence of frames in reverse could slow up a sequence as well.

I am more interested in technique than content with most comic books.  However, Hergé’s publicity claim that Tintin comic books were for people aged “seven to seventy-seven” keeps me coming back to the medium.

A book in the gift shop convinced me to buy it for its focus on narrative in comic books.  The book is entitled J’apprends à raconter une histoire: l’atelier de la bande dessinée avec Hergé (2001, editions Moulinsart).  The books shows children how to ask themselves questions to start a story, how to track story notes and sketches, how to convey different moods with bubbles, and how to tell a story with figures in action among many tips.

Children often learn how to draw comic strip characters, buildings, and vehicles, but sometimes need help with creating stories.  I was happy with this purchase that appealed to my love for knowing how things work.

It took half an hour to get back to Brussels where we ate dinner:  a carbonnade flamande (beef stew) with fries for me and entrecôte (steak) with fries for Laurent.  Of course, the fries were dunked in mayonnaise like the Belgians eat them.

By Ruth Paget, Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books





Ruth Paget Selfie


Friday, September 28, 2012

Discussing Napoleon's Battle Plan for Waterloo (Belgium) over Lunch with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Discussing Napoleon's Battle Plan for Waterloo (Belgium) over Lunch with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



As my husband Laurent and I drove towards Belgium for a weekend trip in Brussels, I thought of how many times Belgium has been a battlefield or subject to foreign powers.  Our touring guide did not gloss over any of Belgium’s painful history.


Instead the Belgique, Duché de Luxembourg Michelin guide lists Belgium’s 500 years under foreign domination before it notes tourist sites.  The monarchies or states that controlled Belgium during this 500-year period include: the Dukes of Burgundy (1384 – 1482), the Hapsbourgs (1482 – 1701), the Austrian Netherlands (1701 – 1795), France (1795 – 1814), and the Kingdom of the Netherlands (1814 – 1831).  In the twentieth century, Germany also occupied Belgium from 1940 – 1944.


On this trip, Laurent and I visited Waterloo, which is about fifteen minutes outside Brussels.  I had read about Waterloo in 100 Decisive Battles: From Ancient Times to the Present Day by Paul K. Davis several years prior to our visit.  Davis writes that Napoleon Bonaparte’s (1769 – 1821) strategy was one of “a separation of enemy forces” or “divide and conquer” in the jargon of office politics.



I remembered Napoleon’s strategy from Waterloo, but not the specifics of this battle, which took place on June 18, 1815.  Laurent drew a map of the battlefield on my paper place mat at the Wellington Café of the battlefield site.



The A-shaped battlefield had Napoleon in the center facing the Anglo-Dutch forces under Field Marshal Arthur Wellesley, the Duke of Wellington (1769 – 1852).  Prussian forces under Field Marshal Prince Gebhard von Blücher (1742 – 1819) arrived on the right flank of Napoleon’s forces in the late afternoon (after 4 pm), allowing the Anglo-Dutch forces and Prussian forces to defeat Napoleon at once.


The Anglo-Dutch forces under Wellington held off Napoleon’s forces until the Prussian forces could arrive.  This resistance completely undid Napoleon’s plans to defeat each force separately; instead he had to fight both forces at once from the middle of a triangular battlefield.


Rainy weather contributed to Napoleon’s defeat by making intelligence difficult and creating muddy battleground conditions for his cavalry as well.


The battleground was hot and dry when we visited.  Laurent walked the entire battlefield on foot as his souvenir of the site.  I hoped that Belgium would never have to be a battlefield again.



By Ruth Paget - Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Ruth Paget Selfie


Thursday, September 27, 2012

Visiting Romeo and Juliet's Town of Verona, Italy with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget




Visiting Romeo and Juliet's Town of Verona, Italy with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget 


My husband Laurent and I loved Verona, which Shakespeare (1564 – 1616) used as the setting for his play Romeo and Juliet

Verona reaps a fortune on this fictional love story, but we still went to San Franceso al Corso Church to see Juliet’s tomb.  When we left the museum, we helped several groups of British ladies find their way to Juliet’s tomb, too.

The play Romeo and Juliet may have been fictional but the domestic turmoil within Italian cities that Shakespeare described was very real.  The Italie du Nord Michelin touring guide we had gave background on this conflict as one between the Montecchi (Montagu) family and the Capuleti (Capulet) family.  The Montecchi were Guelphs, who supported the pope.  The Capuleti were Ghibellines, who supported the Holy Roman Empire centered in Germany.

The conflict between the Guelphs and the Ghibellines divided cities within themselves and also against other cities that threw their entire support behind either the Guelph or Ghibelline faction.  According to infoplease.com, the Guelph-Ghibelline conflict affected central and northern Italy in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. 

The time of the most heightened conflict took place when Guelph-supported Pope Alexander III (1105 – 1181) and the Hohenstaufen Emperor, Frederick I Barbarossa (1123 – 1190), who was supported by the Ghibellines, fought one another with alliances and battles.

Medieval history left my thoughts as the arena dating from the first century C.E. came into view.  The arena has 44 rows of seats and can hold 25,000 spectators.  Operas such as Carmen still take place there in the summer.  Men dressed as centurions complete with swords and women dressed as Cleopatra posed outside the arena with tourists for photographs.

The arena is located on the Piazza Bra.  We ate an outdoor café despite the heat that could fry an egg on the pavement.  We ordered pizza with three liters of water.  From the café we had an excellent view of the arena, park, and a huge TV screen set up for the Spain-Italy Eurocup match.  (Spain won later that night 4 – 0.  It was a very quiet evening in Italy Laurent noted.)

As we walked back to the car after lunch, I thought all had ended well for our Verona outing.

By Ruth Paget, Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books




Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Ruth Paget Selfie


Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Visiting the Italian University Town of Padua with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Visiting the Italian University Town of Padua with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget 


When my husband Laurent and I visited northern Italy, the city that topped my list of places to visit was Padua for its university. 

The University of Padua was founded in 1222 and is the second oldest in Italy.  (The University of Bologna was founded in 1088.)  According to our Italie du Nord Michelin touring guide, Galileo (1564-1642) taught at Padua and Nicholas Copernicus (1473-1543), Giovanni Pico della Mandorla (1463 – 1494) and Torquato Tasso (1544 – 1595) were students there.

The astronomer Galileo had to stand trial before the Inquisition in Rome in 1633 for teaching that the earth rotated around the sun.  According to Stephen Hawking’s On the Shoulders of Giants: The Great Works of Physics and Astronomy which records Galileo’s renunciation of his teachings and book Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems: Ptolemaic and Copernican, Galileo is reported to have said “Eppur si muove” in a mutter as he stood up from kneeling.  (“Eppur si muove” is loosely translated as “yet it moves.”)

Law and math were the main subjects of study for Copernicus at Padua a generation before Galileo supported Copernican theory that is laid out in De Revolunionbus Orbium Coelestium by Copernicus.

One of the University of Padua’s most distinguished students was Giovanni Pico della Mandorla.  Pico della Mandorla wrote Oration on the Dignity of Man, which is one of the reference texts for Renaissance Humanism.  Torquato Tasso, a poet and leading figure of the Renaissance, studied law and philosophy at the University of Padua as well.

As we walked through Padua’s streets, I wanted to imbibe some of the insight that Padua seems to foster, but Padua’s red buildings retain scorching heat well.  The medieval town has narrow streets, no arcades, and very few piazzas.  I was dripping wet when we visited.  Padua’s scholars must have taken summer semester off I thought.

The walk in the heat to the Church of the Eremitani (Church of the Hermits) was worth the effort, though, despite our not having reservations to the Scrovegni Chapels with its mural paintings by Giotto (1267-1337).

I wanted to see Andrea Mantegna’s (1431 – 1506) paintings in the Church of the Eremitani.  These paintings were his first major work and date from 1488 according to the National Gallery of London’s website.  

When we arrived his work was being restored, so we could not see most of it.  However, what was visible of his Martydom of Saint James, the Assumption, and the Martyrdom of Saint Christopher show how he achieved the sensation of grandeur in viewers through several technical devices, especially perspective.

When you look at Mantegna’s paintings of figures, you feel like you are looking upward.  He achieves this effect by tapering and angling his figures.  He seems to have lighter colors at the top of his paintings as well and darker colors below to enhance the upward flow of his paintings.  He also uses architecture in his paintings to create upward momentum by positioning his arches at angles.   These technical devices all give his work a dramatic impact.

The heat had worn me out and ruled out further touring.  Getting out of Padua was tricky.  Medieval Italian cities like Padua have a circular pattern, which seems to throw off GPS systems.  We circled around a bit until we could decode the “veer right, then turn left” instructions. (Tangential instructions?)

By Ruth Paget - Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Ruth Paget Selfie


Eating a Venetian Countryside Lunch (Veneto Region, Italy) with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Eating a Venetian Countryside Lunch (Veneto Region, Italy) with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget


In the guest house of Villa Valmarana in Vicenza, the paintings by Giovanni Battista Teipolo (1696 – 1770) reflect the pastoral life of the Veneto region outside Venice, Carnival season, scenes from the life of the Greek gods, as well as whimsical scenes of Chinoiserie and Gothic architecture.  Italian majolica dish sets decorated the villa guest house as well.

Italians, like the French, make beautiful decorative art objects and know how to display them.  The Italians do this by not crowding them with all the other beautiful decorative art objects in the house.  The art objects probably are rotated as well according to season or holiday as the Japanese do.

In the garden behind the main villa, my husband Laurent and I walked under cool, floral arcades with a statue of Zeus at the end of them.  The interior garden between the main house and guest villa had a rose garden and fountain.  We sat on benches and could smell the scent of antique roses on the hot, humid breeze.

From Vicenza, we drove out to the Berica Riviera.  We ate lunch at a small restaurant where no one spoke English.  The menu was given to us orally in Italian with a few non-verbal signs.  I have read several Italian cookbooks, so my restaurant Italian allowed us to order a hearty meal.

For the primi or first course, Laurent had tagliatelle with ragu (beef and tomato sauce).   I ordered bigoli pasta, which are the regional pastas of the Veneto region outside Venice and of Venice itself. The bigoli are thick, round strands of pasta that make you feel very full after you eat them with ragu like I did.  Our other sauce choices were sausage and marinara.

For the secondi or main course, Laurent had prosciutto with cantaloupe.   I ate a ham hock with rosemary. For the contorni or vegetables to go with these dishes, Laurent had a large mixed salad.  I ate porcini mushrooms cooked in olive oil; I could have just eaten these they were so good.

On another Vicenza outing, we walked along the Corso Palladio for 1 ½ hours.  Vicenza is like Venice on land our Italie du Nord Michelin Touring Guide noted.  Vicenza is a UNESCO World Heritage site for its architecture by Andrea Palladio (1508-1580) and for its city planning we read on a plaque at Palladio’s Teatro Olimpico.

In the downtown area of Vicenza, there are 22 Palladian villas, churches, basilicas, and loggias all together.  This area is pedestrian-only if you do not count bicycles.  Many of the buildings have arcades, which makes touring in the summer heat more pleasurable.

Vicenza merits several visits, especially for lovers of architecture.

By Ruth Paget, Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography
Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Ruth Paget Selfie

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Visiting Vicenza (Italy), famous for its Palladian Villas and Tiepolo Paintings with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Visiting Vicenza (Italy), famous for its Palladian Villas and Tiepolo Paintings with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget


My husband Laurent and I went to see architect Andrea Palladio’s (1508 – 1580) Villa Almerico, popularly known as La Rotunda, on a Sunday morning in Vicenza, Italy.

La Rotunda, is made up of four wings on which a central hall has a dome over it.  The façades on the wings have Greek columns on them, making La Rotunda appear to be a small temple on the small hill it stands upon on the outskirts of Vicenza.  However, what distinguishes La Rotunda is Palladio’s use of the dome as an element in domestic architecture.

Witold Rybczynski dates La Rotunda between 1560 – 1570 in his book The Perfect House: A Journey with the Renaissance Master Andrea Palladio.  Rybczynski’s book is a wonderful touring guide that might have you identifying Palladian elements in your home town such as those on banks besides using it to appreciate Palladian Villas in Italy.

Palladian influence was wide Rybczynski writes.  For example, in the state of Virginia, the James River Plantation homes owe their colonnaded porches to Palladian inspiration.  Palladio also inspired Thomas Jefferson while building his home of Monticello outside Charlottesville, Virginia.

Visiting La Rotunda was tantalizing, but the villa was closed on Sunday mornings. We had to photograph it through a gate.  We later learned that the interior was open on Wednesday afternoons only.  So, our plan A for the day would not work.

However, this was Italy, so if one villa was closed, another would probably be open.  We walked around the corner to Villa Valmarana.  When we bought our tickets, we discovered that Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (1696 – 1770) had painted scenes from mythology in the main villa and from literature and Venetian popular sources in the guest house.

Laurent had vaguely heard of Tiepolo and asked me more about him.  I told him that Tiepolo usually worked on paintings that looked as if the ceiling had opened up to the sky with angels transporting people to heaven or themselves on billowing, three-dimensional clouds.

In the main villa, Tiepolo used three-dimensional painting to show the sacrifice of Iphigenia by her father Agamemnon.  This scene is often thought to be savage and brutal, reflecting the misogyny of Greek culture.  I have always read this Greek myth differently.

Agamemnon belonged to the House of Atreus, which was descended from Tantalus.  The House of Atreus was cursed, and I believed it was for its mistreatment of women.  Families that treat their women well should be blessed.  Perhaps this interpretation explains why this scene of Iphegenia’s sacrifice would show up in a home to remind its inhabitants to treat women well. 

Just the paintings in Villa Valmarana main house make it a destination to visit in Vicenza.

By Ruth Paget, Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books




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Friday, September 21, 2012

Visiting Cheverny Chateau, the Model for Tintin's Home Drawn by Herge with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Visiting Cheverny Chateau, the Model for Tintin's home Drawn by Herge, with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget 


The Château de Cheverny built outside Blois is a rare, unified gem of French architecture built between 1604 to 1654 for Hurault de Cheverny.

The château’s twelve niches for busts on the second of its three stories give the façade rhythm and a unifying element despite the semicircular, triangular, and trapezoidal roofs over the main body and wings of the château.

The symmetrical arrangement pleases the eye and appealed to the Belgian comic book creator Hergé (1907 – 1983), who used Cheverny as the inspiration for the Moulinsart Château in his Tintin comic series.  Hergé just used the central part of the château for his comic book strip.

Hergé may have chosen to use only the central part of the château, because the two wide wings on the ends of the central part of the château would have made the comic book frames very wide.  The architecture would have taken away from the action of the figures.  Hergé also refrained from drawing the twelve niches for busts for the busts.  Too much detail in comic books can take away from the action of the characters, whom you want to focus upon as a reader.

There was a French-language exhibit being held when we visited called Les Secrets de Moulinsart.  One of the secrets of Moulinsart is that Hergé placed the château in Belgium in his comic strip and named it Moulinsart by reversing the name of a Belgian town Saar-Moulin to obtain Moulinsart.  (Hergé did this with his own name of Georges Rémi, which became Hergé to show the reversal of his initials.)

Moulinsart Château was important to the heroes of Tintin – Captain Haddock, Professor Tournesol, Milou the dog and Tintin – because they finally had a stable home to come back to from their adventures according to Benoît Peeters in L’oeuvre intégrale de Hergé. 

The Tintin exhibit had rooms set up to look like Tintin’s bedroom complete with clothes hanging in a closet that were identifiable from his different adventures, Moulinsart château with broken windows from a storm, the deck of the Unicorn ship, and Professor Tournesol’s laboratory among others.  The exhibit also showed photographs of people that Hergé had caricatured.

As my husband Laurent and I walked up to the steps of the château all I could think of was how wonderful it would look in wedding photos.

By Ruth Paget - Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Ruth Paget Selfie