Of all the things we have so far obtained in our move to France, none is more awesome than our residents' museum pass. Good at 11 museums in the city, one need merely prove permanent residency in the city and, voila, a special photo pass, like ours, created for us on the spot at the Beaux Arts museum, is issued. It is good for three years! So naturally the first museum we went to after acquiring it, just a few days later, was one of the only ones that doesn't take part in that system. We went to the Chagall Museum.
It is handy to have ten or more museums to walk to, and the Chagall Museum is a cracker!
The Chagall was built in the early seventies to host a collection of biblical paintings Chagall donated to the city. Chagall lived nearby in St. Paul De Vence, but was fond of this city because, well, why wouldn't he be? He was still alive when the museum opened, and he attended the ceremonies.
Chagall was, to quote Nicholas Cage's character's assessment of him in Moonstruck, "A very great artist."
And you can see that in a second with these paintings.
These are big, intense, rich paintings he donated, full of color, complexity, mastery, and interest.
Our walk there was a delight too, along a street with a very excellent bakery on it that I bought a bit too much from on the way home during Christmas Eve. You cross under the train tracks and then climb into a more residential neighborhood ending with the kind of thing that always steals my heart, a dedicated walking path that makes its way to just around the corner from the museum.
Because it was Christmas Eve they were closing an hour early, and in the mysterious French way they had closed off about half the museum, possibly to make it easier to empty? We even had to wait a bit until there was capacity room for us. On the plus side they didn't charge anyone anything, including us! A savings of 16 Euros is nothing to sneeze at, but because I have come down with a cold I did anyway.
I love the little front yard garden cafe here too. We managed to slip in just before closing for coffees. We drank them peacefully as they played pop folk music from around the time the museum was built. We immediately started imagining coming here all the time.
I took some pictures. I put myself in them as a sort of "I go to the Chagall Museum and disappear into the paintings." I worked all day on them, decided they were a disaster, then decided they were pretty good after all.
Here I am in the museum:
And then here I am as I inappropriately made myself at home in the paintings:





























