Tag / Belleville
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Belleville for the people!
Belleville is a political neighborhood. Maybe that is why I am drawn to it. Most people vote left--socialist, communist, etc. In the late 1800's, one out of ten Parisian anarchists lived in Belleville and the area played a central role in the Commune. Belleville is up high--the highest spot in Paris is in it--and it… -
Real Belleville
Sunday, I saw a completely other side of Belleville at the Parc de Belleville belvedere. I went because there is always something going on there on Sundays. What I saw was the tale end of a festival called "Belleville en Vrai" (Real Belleville). It's the tenth year of this three-day festival which includes, I discovered,… -
Synagogue of the Undead Rabbi
When I am in Paris, I always stay in Belleville, the 19e or 20e. I stay in a different part each year and as a result see and learn different things. This year, I'm near the Pyrénées metro stop, close to Parc de Belleville. I'm really at the crossroads of the vast variety of cultures… -
Busy at the Pyrénées stop
Everyone was in a hurry--except for me! -
At Belleville Market
Busy morning at the market. -
Anarchist Neighborhood
Belleville is a good place for political art. Here are a few known ones. The skull soldier showing that war means death (not career advancement) always has a well taken care of plant just below it, making the tableau complete. Mad Marx, who I posted last year, seems to have acquired some friends (or did… -
To Create is to Resist!!! To Resist is to Create!
I believe that. Resistance may not achieve its current goals but creates movements. Creative activity gets the word out and gives sustenance. Here's a fine example of political street art on rue de Belleville below Pyrénées in Paris 20e. The tweezers holding an eyeball refer to the woman in the painting, Fiorina Jacob Lignier, a… -
“One is not born, but becomes, Yellow Vest”
Zigzag. Out with the old, in with the new. We're not quite sure where we're going. But we know what we want to leave: 'flexible' workplaces where people don't matter; universities more like biological processes than forums for deliberation and debate; institutions that thrive by making others precarious, isolated, displaced and hungry. Without knowing the shape… -
That’s how it is in Paris
My photographic style is a response to what I see in France. I have visited Paris every year since 2015. What photographer would not want to capture the elegance of even the smallest details there? Here's an architectural detail I saw in 2016 on a walk back to my Belleville apartment from a look at…
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