Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Our hill

 







Though we cannot seem to find a home here, we do have our pretty place to stay for another five or six weeks. A full moon rose over the Mediterranean tonight, causing those of us out by the boardwalk to inadvertantly gawk, even if we were just popping over to the market for champagne and toilet paper, but the town does feel just a little more shut down everyday. The boulangeries are now selling their baguettes out of the tabac with the mean lady, and the restaurants that haven't shut for the season seem to take any excuse to be closed.

I'm not complaining though. Not yet.

As promised I have been working on single image constructions a bit more thoroughly, and the one I have to show today is appropriately of the hill up above our apartment.






















Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Retired

 





Apparently I'm not on vacation. I'm retired. And today I found out the hard way.


I got up early because as a person in my sixties I rarely sleep late even if I'd like to. It just doesn't usually... work.

I looked outside. It was windy, but the town beach is still in use and the sun was brilliant.

I had coffee with my lovely wife.

One of us suggested that we go for a walk and grab some things at one of our local markets. So we dressed appropriately, grabbed our things, and headed outside.

It seemed strangely shadowy out in the town.

"What time is it?" I asked.



It was 4:30 in the afternoon.








































Monday, November 3, 2025

Up the hill







Last week we walked out of central Cannes and up a main street. 

Cannes, despite all its Cote d'Azur charms, surprisingly congenial and always thrumming tourist area, and elements of pure glitz, is surprisingly urban. It is a city of 75,000 people that oddly feels like New York or San Francisco at times, to give the U.S. frame of reference. The large avenue we walked up felt almost generically big city European, and I was interested that I found that mildly appealing. Maybe since our whole experience landing in France so far has been taken up in deleriously charming beach vacation towns, a little raw city life offered a nice counterpoint. That said, this street was not full of places I longed to visit, being more like an avenue of many usable services and shops, too many cars, and maybe a couple of secret gems.

The point of our climb up this hill, a longish one, was to visit the neighborhood of Le Cannet and, more specifically, The Bonnard Museum. Pierre Bonnard, in case you wondered, was a post impressionist painter who made his home in the neighborhood until he died in the mid twentieth century. His colorful, expressive work is right up my alley and I've always enjoyed it. The museum was stunning, with its back windows overlooking a half quaint, half grand church and the higher upper floors (the museum is spread over several tidy floors) looking out over a bit of Le Cannet and down to Cannes.  

While the museum clearly has a permanent collection it appears to present strictly in specific thematic shows built around Bonnard. I suspect, along with their curatorial staff's excellent taste, that this is a brilliant way to go about a museum like this, as the relationships around being able to loan many Bonnards out at any time allows one to borrow all kinds of interesting top quality work to create a themed show around. And since Bonnard's life and career spanned the latter part of the 1800's and the first half of the 1900's, the possibilities are nearly endless. The show we saw included Monet (it's uncanny how any Monet in a group show ends up being a signature highlight!), Picasso, Morisot, Seurat, Renoir, Corot, Matisse, and some curiously wonderful Giacomettis.

This last exhibit just closed and a new one, involving his studio with mimosa trees and loans from the Pompidou Centre in Paris, opens in a few weeks and I am deleriously excited. In our list of our wants and desires from the city we end up in, museums a little too easily sink down the list, but this place was a real reminder of how much they mean to us.



I made a small ai short of Bonnard paintings come to life. Remember how these work? Click to engage it. Enlarge in the bottom corner, and click again to play. There is a bit of ambient sound too!



















Sunday, November 2, 2025

Japan dream number nine

 







As my darling wife recently observed, we have been in France now for not much more than half the time we were in Japan. This is mind boggling because in some ways it feels like we have been in France forever now, whereas Japan seems like some kind of passing dream. 

But if I look back, Japan was complicated, and with the crushing heat of the first couple of weeks, the sheer bewilderment of the place, the urban intensity beyond anything I'd ever experienced,  it took some time to just find our feet there. The luxury of a month in Kyoto was the opportunity to fidget and suffer and seep into the place until we filled every coffee house and tea room in the city, to understand that just like everyone else in the world we are not like other people.



I am making my tenth attempt to put together a final folder of images from Japan, a diverse and finished series. And while I do this it is a good time to show some of these images here again, some for the first time, some slightly polished, and some probably largely as seen before, but all of them now with a few notes of context that perhaps can help them out, as they are all built off of real pictures.





While these are built off of real photographs, some, like this first one, travelled a long way from the original. There are too many additions and alterations to the image below for me to remember them all at this point, but these changes came from a desire to express how strongly I felt about this small garden that was part of a museum gallery in the Arashiyami area of Kyoto. Arashiyama, which we never returned to, was nevertheless a key turning point in our visit to Kyoto, where we finally started to blend into the city. We had come some way to visit a show of ceramics there featuring one of my wife's favorite artists, Lucie Rie, but the museum or gallery was as much like someone's beautiful, almost perfect Japanese home, and the area itself, famous for its bamboo groves, was a kind of relief from the relentlessness of the city we lived in.


















I cannot begin to remember from where I took this next image, as these small charms were everywhere, and for a time I was taking endless pictures of building facades, which in Kyoto were ubiquitous, wildly diverse and charming. Houses in Japan are strikingly private and from the street I almost never caught a glimpse inside in any light. Perhaps this also allowed for the houses to present with such composure and completeness.

 Since most of these were from our quietly bustling, faded and rich, unfamous neighborhood, there is a good chance this picture is from there too.






























And here we are in Tokyo, where I am endeavoring to give off the sheer urbanity of the city and its feeling of being different and full at every inch. I took this gritty view from the window of a glossy clothing store that I bought two brown shirts from.























Saturday, November 1, 2025

Day off

 






Today we had a day off!

I don't know what it is a day off from, though.

We had no apartments to visit.

We didn't go on a trip to Cannes, or anywhere else. Perhaps it was a day off from vacation?

We were just home.


Except we don't have one.


But we live for this while against a cliff on the sea. 

It rained today. The water was very clear and I could count all the rocks in the Mediterranean from my balcony. For a short time it got so foggy we could not see the Islands in the Bay of Cannes. One of the Islands is where the Man in the Iron Mask was imprisoned. There's a tower out there. Is that where he was? Sometimes I take pictures of the tower, but they're not that good so I don't show you.

I guess I'm retired, though I still professionally write clerkmanifesto for you. Professionally in the sense that I'm serious about it, not in terms of commerce. Today I had this great idea about building more complicated pictures and just showing you them one at a time because they are made in layers and warrant much time and discussion. But somehow I lost half of what I was working on, and what I did make got a little confused in my files. I wasn't sure what layer I was on in building the pictures. I don't know if any are finished. 

I would like to show you my favorite one but I think it's lost for good.

I do have a couple pictures of Cannes for now. They might be finished.









































Friday, October 31, 2025

The Snow

 










It snowed today here, well, near here, way up in the Mountains, which to my delight we can see. For us down on the coast, the day was full of heavy drizzles and driven light rains with temperatures in the very upper teens (readers from the USA, here is a helpful conversion guide for you. I invented it myself! Double your Celsius number and then subtract 10 percent. Then add 32 (the ice number!). Et voila! You have the big F. So, 19 degrees Celsius, doubled, is 38, minus, say, 4 (no need to get too fancy), 34, plus 32: 66!). This rain was a trial for us as we were off on a apartment visit that involved wandering outside for hours. But the ocean in the storm was mad with color, and incredible, and when the storm broke apart in the late afternoon the sky was dramatic and even gave us some rainbow.

Once we were safe at home I got a picture or two, which, converted to my current style of choice, the diorama, gives a feel for it. Because its name shows up below, Mandelieu la Napoule is the next town up from here on the way to Cannes, a bit bigger and sits on the sea, in below these mountains in our view.


























Thursday, October 30, 2025

We speak French!

 








The rhetoric, at least as I encountered it all my life, is that the French are horrible and cruel about people speaking their language, or trying to. 

They are, but they are everything else as well: kind, patient, irritated, confused, and really nice about it. They vary. And if I had to give an overall accounting, despite some bitter experiences with that famous French disdain, they are like people everywhere else we've travelled: touched and complimentary about our speaking their language, in this case, the awesome and mysterious French one.

And though one is supposed to hold tourists in general contempt in order to feel better about being a tourist (I'm an Emigre, dammit!), all these English speaking tourists flocking to the Cote D' Azur and speaking English like it's a divine right have set the stage for our flailing, toddler level, utterly confused French to look like graciousness itself to the beleaguered local inhabitants.

Going in I was inclined to think that many tourists have better French than we do, but I suspect now it is only the tiniest percentage that do. A couple days ago in a beach restaurant (that we can see from the window of where we're currently living), we got a slightly absurd compliment from the waiter we were chatting with that brought it all home.

"How did you come to learn French!" The waiter marvelled. "It is very unusual for Americans to know French." 

It should be noted this was spoken in English.

Although it is possible someone else has paid us this compliment in French in the past, but it would have blown by us by as we only understand maybe a quarter of what anyone says to us, and then only when it is slow, has a lot of context, and is being said the second time around.
















Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Wednesdays

 






Today was Wednesday. 

I used to work on Wednesdays. I don't know why that occurred to me just now. Perhaps because I don't know what I do on Wednesdays at this point in my life. Take pictures and edit them? Watch it rain? Travel? The truth is that we haven't really settled into anything here yet, and the search for an apartment gets us out the door when sheer, avid interest doesn't.

On Wednesdays here everything closes, including both the bakeries, which I sort of knew, but forgot. So I had to spend an entire day without a baguette. It is one of those French things that this tiny village of few stores also has 20 restaurants and the two boulangeries. Both of which close on Wednesday, and both of which are closing at the end of this month until the New Year. I am not looking forward to this. One might think: Why doesn't one close for two months now and the other close for two months after the first one opens again?

I wouldn't advise thinking this.

It'll just slow you down.
























Tuesday, October 28, 2025

The sea

 







I spent my birthday on the sea.


This is because my lovely wife and I are living... get this: on the sea!

Which is kind of neat.

We woke up in Cannes on my birthday in a glass penthouse on the roof of a hotel in a bizarrely affordable room that costs ten times as much during the film festival. Then we took a helicopter back to our long term airbnb.

Did I say helicopter?

I meant bus. But whatever, they both work.

Instead of my usual method of one minute of photography at a time, my birthday indulgence allowed for me to take eight million photographs.

A lot of these are of the sea, because, you know, it's right here.

I'm working on all these pictures and am a little overwhelmed by them, but today I started working with diorama versions of my pictures and am experiencing my usual "new thing" enthusiasm where I feel all geniusy and like I now need to take all 11,000 pictures from the past two months of traveling and convert them into this style. 

It'll pass.

But in the meantime I'd like to show you my most recent images in this style:











































































































































































































Monday, October 27, 2025

Marseille

 


























On our slow way back to our temporary home, we had to change trains in Marseille. We had done this on the way out to Sète, but on the trip back we had some extra time, so we were able to wander outside the train station without many expectations.


It turned out to be an absolutely spectacular scene outside the less spectacular and extremely busy train station. I took about a minute’s worth of photographs of the commanding views over the giant city. Then we had some bad coffee, and we were on our way.









































































































































































Sunday, October 26, 2025

Adventure

 







Today, which happens to be my birthday, should also see us back in our little village town on the ocean at Théoule sur Mer. I’m curious to see if it feels any more closed down now at the end of the season, or how much it will start to close down as we head into November and even the start of December. We should still be there through that time as we continue to search for a place to live.


I’m more or less dictating this from our last morning in the Venice of the Languedoc, and I don’t know if I’ll be able to include any new photographs below. But I wanted to make sure, while I had the chance and a little time this morning, to get a post in so I’m not scrambling to do it later, on the day we return to Théoule sur Mer, on my birthday. So though I am reporting here before leaving Sete, we’ll see where we are and perhaps have more reflections on this search tomorrow.


And did we find a place to live on this trip? It’s hard to say.


Traveling like this is all the adventure it was cracked up to be, though I’m not sure adventure is exactly what we think it is when we’re not having one. It has very high highs and very low lows. And, at least for us, it seems to crash between them pretty violently.


We found places we loved on this trip. And I think if an apartment that we can actually rent will accommodate us, we could end up living here for a very long time indeed. But it is equally possible that we will never be back here again.


Which is a split in the fabric of reality that shocks me a little to consider. But perhaps that’s the way things go when one tries to build a new life in a new place.