Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Oafish Chic

The land I know and almost love - the one east of the 30, that is, is a sham. A cardboard cutout, a mirror image, a Romford Rolex or a Chinese Calvin Klein. Here, in the birthplaces of the iconic names in food, wine and fashion, chic has a totally different connotation and is not exportable. Copied, transplanted, yes. The real deal somehow floats effortlessly above all attempts at plagiarism, even with the right labels. Buying Louis Vuitton in an airconditioned bus station somewhere off the Sixth Ring doesn't quite have the same cachet as buying it at the iconic architectural masterpiece at 101, avenue des Champs-Elysées. As a matter of interest, I ran across a 1920’s Louis Vuitton trunk in a B&B in Burgundy the other week, complete with the name of the original owner on the front and its own unique lock with hand-made brass key. At auction, it would have fetched the price of a modest house.
Shopping (window or otherwise) in and around Place Madeleine  - yes, it's the Magdala again; amazing how she seeps in and out of my consciousness - reminds me how lumpen and oafish I really am. Coffee at the original Fauchon. A tea shop containing possibly five hundred different varieties of tea, a crowd gathering outside the discreet caviar store where 1kg of best grey Caspian sells for 3500 euros, to watch the sturgeon swimming in the aquarium window, a fish I have to admit I have never ever seen in the flesh. A shop selling over a hundred different varieties of mustard.
I had to go into the church and restore balance. It’s a beautiful building – I missed the free concert by an hour – a Romanian choir were doing Byrd, Mozart and Fauré. Never mind, Verdi’s Requiem is being sung there later in the month.
Food at one of Paris’ little secrets. At 7:30, I nodded to the maître d' and secured what looked like the last available table. Simple French food, no frills at a price that didn't make the eyes water. When I walked out, a hundred people were waiting in line. I swallowed my pride, pretended to be a tourist and photographed the napkin.

4 comments:

  1. Knowing your rather cosmopolitan and eclectic self, I'll skip making a comment about the British grasp of the concept of chic, and give credence to your observations.
    As a non-tourist doing touristy things, the travelogue is hilariously delightful. (The napkin is a nice touch) lol

    P.S. You got a parking ticket... I think. Our mandoob seems to feel it was somebody else's and they stuck it on your truck. We'll see.

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  2. *sigh*
    Encore une fois. It's a Sports Utility Vehicle. Trucks are dirty, rusty and used to transport farm animals. If you have been carrying sheep in my SUV.....

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  3. Ha! You won't know til you get here. Besides sheep are clean and there aren't any porkers to transport. So either way I'm safe. Until you get the parking ticket.

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  4. Love the French, BTW teehee

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