Showing posts with label Black Paris tours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black Paris tours. Show all posts

Thursday, June 30, 2011

An Overview of Paris Reflections: Walks through African-American Paris

I have recently been approached by several people with requests to purchase or to autograph copies of Paris Reflections: Walks through African-American Paris. I co-authored this book with Christiann Anderson to call attention to the rich history of African Americans in the French capital. The book features six abbreviated versions of walks that I have created for Discover Paris’ Entrée to Black Paris. Christiann provided the illustrations. The following is an overview of what you will find in Paris Reflections.

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The Sorbonne/Mouffetard walk provides a tour of the 5th arrondissment. You will see the illustrious University of Paris Sorbonne, learn a little about the ancient history of this area (it was settled by the Romans centuries ago), and visit one of Paris’ most celebrated shopping streets, rue Mouffetard. Against this backdrop, you will learn about several African Americans who have studied at the Sorbonne as well as see sites frequented by many of our writers and artists, including William Gardner Smith and Loïs Mailou Jones. You will also learn about the Nardal Sisters, black women from Martinique who were instrumental in the launching of the Négritude movement (a cause devoted to affirming black culture through literature) in France.

The walk through Saint-Germain-des-Près (6th arrondissement) is circular, meaning that you begin and end in the same place. The world famous trio of cafés, the Deux Magots, the Flore and the Brasserie Lipp mark the starting point, and the importance of café life for African Americans is emphasized. You will work your way past the magnificent place Saint-Sulpice to the edge of the beautiful Luxembourg Garden to see where a major hangout for African Americans writers of the post-World War II era still exists. A visit to the garden follows, then a walk past the theater where the great playwrights Alexandre Dumas and Victor Séjour saw their works performed. A stroll in a quarter where jazz was once king leads you back to the Café Flore and the end of the tour.

The Saint-Michel/Musée d’Orsay walk takes you through the upper part of the 6th and 7th arrondissements. Here, the word “upper” means the part of the district that is closest to the Seine. Art galleries are prominent in this area of the 6th, and you will see many where African Americans have exhibited their work. Additionally, you will be able to visit the shops of several dealers of African art and artifacts. Walking by the French Institute, you will learn of an African American who excelled as a Shakespearean actor in the nineteenth century. Moving on to the 7th arrondissement, you will find out more about many of our famous writers and painters while surveying the plethora of antique stores for which this quarter is known. You will end the walk at the Legion of Honor museum where you will learn of several African Americans who have received this prestigious award, and the Musée d’Orsay, which contains several works depicting people of color.

Plate 2. James Baldwin
© Christiann Anderson

The Montparnasse walk (lower 6th and 14th arrondissements) emphasizes the lives and work of artists. While parts of this walk take you to areas frequented by tourists, you will also go into neighborhoods that are “off-the-beaten-path”. Montparnasse has been steeped in artistic tradition since the early 1900s, and African-American artists such as Augusta Savage and Laura Wheeler Waring of the “Negro Colony” of the 1920s and 1930s and abstract artists Ed Clark and Beauford Delaney of the post-World War II era settled here in keeping with that tradition. You will see where they lived and worked, and visit the cafés that were as important to life in this district as the Deux Magots and the Flore were to life in Saint-Germain-des-Près. You will also see the famous Bobino Theater, where Josephine Baker made a triumphant comeback to the Paris stage and performed her last show ever, and the square that was dedicated in her honor.

Plate 4. The Funeral of Josephine Baker in Paris
© Christiann Anderson

Our Notre-Dame-de-Lorette/Opéra walk in the 9th arrondissement is another “off-the-beaten-path” walk that takes you to the area where African Americans first established a community in Paris after World War I. The night club scene is what made “Pig Alley” (a tortured pronunciation of Pigalle, the name of a street and a square found in the area) renowned in its day. Here you will learn about the players – Langston Hughes, Josephine Baker and Bricktop were among them – who turned this district into “the Harlem of Paris”. Leaving the Pigalle area and moving back toward an area more frequented by tourists, you will see the theater where Sidney Bechet inspired such a frenzy in his French audience that they rioted, and the opera house where W. E. B. DuBois and Countee Cullen enjoyed performances.

The final walk presented in Paris Reflections covers the most well known and popular area of Paris, that of the Louvre (1st arrondissement) and the Champs-Elysées (8th arrondissement). Here you will see Paris in all of its grand style: the Tuileries Garden, place de la Concorde, the twin facades of La Madeleine church and the Assemblée Nationale, and the grandest of avenues – the Champs-Elysées – capped by the splendid Arc de Triomphe. A wide variety of African American activity took place here, from a civil rights march in support of Dr. King’s March on Washington to a state funeral for Josephine Baker. Some of our artists’ best work has been exhibited and honored with awards at the Grand Palais just off the Champs-Elysées. More recently, an African American left his indelible mark on the Louvre when he remodeled part of its recently renovated Richelieu wing. You will learn of all these things and more on the Louvre/Arc de Triomphe walk.

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Entrée to Black Paris!™ is a Discover Paris! blog.

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Thursday, January 20, 2011

A Weekend in Paris

Are you traveling to Paris in 2011?  Take advantage of Discover Paris' Entrée to Black Paris™ SPECIAL OFFER for a discounted tour!  Click here to read more...

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What could be more exciting than a weekend jaunt in Paris? Here is a walking itinerary that will give you a taste of the charm and beauty of the city as well as a glimpse of the African-American history that has unfolded there.

Day 1 – Plan on an inspiring combination of sightseeing and shopping with a visit to the Louvre, the neighboring Tuileries Garden and the Champs Elysées. The Louvre Museum and its glass pyramids juxtapose the beauty of Renaissance and modern architecture, while the commercial center under the pyramids will satisfy many of your shopping impulses. While browsing here, reflect upon the fact that African-American David Harmon was charged with completing a major part of the renovations done on the Louvre during the early 1990s.

Inverted pyramid in commercial center at the Louvre
© Discover Paris!

Emerge from the commercial center to view the splendid Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel and visit the Tuileries Garden, then head for place de la Concorde.

Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel
© Discover Paris!

Jardin des Tuileries
© Discover Paris!

Once at the place, take a moment to look at the Palais Bourbon across the river – home to the French equivalent of the U.S. House of Representatives, where distinguished politicians such as Martinique’s Aimé Césaire served and French Guiana’s Christiane Taubira continues to serve. Gaze upon the Luxor obelisk, where diva Jessye Norman sang France’s national anthem in celebration of the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution in 1989. Then look to the northwest corner of the square to see the Hôtel de Crillon, where Reginald Lewis launched his takeover of TLC Beatrice to become the first black billionaire in the history of the United States.

Obelisk of Luxor
© Discover Paris!

Proceed up the avenue des Champs Elysées for a look at its gardens dotted with pavilions that now serve as theaters and exclusive restaurants. Beyond the Rond Point (roundabout), the gardens give way to clubs, movie theaters and more restaurants and shopping as you approach the Arc de Triomphe.

Champs Elysées Gardens
© Discover Paris!

A detour onto avenue Montaigne will take you into the world of haute couture, where the greatest names in fashion await you. At the far end of this street is the Théâtre des Champs Elysées, where Josephine Baker and Sidney Bechet took Paris by storm in the wildly successful show La Revue Nègre in 1925.

Dior - avenue Montaigne and rue François I
© Discover Paris!

Théâtre des Champs Elysées
© Discover Paris!

Day 2 – Spend the day exploring areas frequented by famous African Americans in Paris. The 5th arrondissement (district) is home to the Sorbonne, where several conferences on African-American culture were held in the 1990s. Venues such as the Salle de la Mutualité where Malcolm X spoke and place de la Contrascarpe where Chester Himes frequented a favorite café are among many that are significant to African Americans. Plan to have lunch at an Ethiopian restaurant near the Sorbonne before taking a stroll past the bouquinistes (the book vendors along the Seine), where you might find a surprise gift for an art or literature aficionado back home. From the quay, you will have an excellent view of Notre-Dame, which so inspired Richard Wright upon his arrival in Paris in 1946.

Sorbonne
© Discover Paris!

Bouquiniste
© Discover Paris!

Notre Dame Cathedral
© Discover Paris!

A brief walk to the adjoining 6th arrondissement reveals sites such as the Odéon Theater where Ira Aldridge played Othello, the Café de Flore where James Baldwin socialized and rewrote Go Tell It on the Mountain, and the La Louisiane hotel that was home to numerous African-American jazzmen.

Théâtre de l'Odéon
© Discover Paris!

Café de Flore
© Discover Paris!

Consider complementing your promenade with a visit to the cafés and gourmet food shops on the rue de Buci to round out your brief but exhilarating stay in the City of Light.

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Entrée to Black Paris!™ is a Discover Paris! blog.



Friday, January 14, 2011

Entrée to Black Paris™ Tours - Special Offer!

Are you traveling to Paris in 2011?  Take advantage of Discover Paris' Entrée to Black Paris™ SPECIAL OFFER for a discounted tour!  Read more below...

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Discover Paris' Entrée to Black Paris™ (ETBP) tours and activities reveal the story of Paris through the black experience. We are developing them to help increase awareness of Paris’ rich black heritage among all people – particularly those who already know and love Paris, and are seeking new avenues of exploration to enrich their cultural appreciation of the city. We have received many positive reviews for our tours (given by our guides Monique and Tom) , and invite you to read about them here:


Monique giving her "Black Paris after WWII" walk


Tom giving his "Black History in and around the Luxembourg Garden" walk


As an introduction to our Entrée to Black Paris™ tours and activities, we are offering:

• a 10% discount on the tour or activity of your choice
• a free downloadable DP! walk (a $25-$30 value)
• a special online viewing of a video entitled “Images of Contemporary Black Paris”

to those who engage us to provide a self-guided ETBP itinerary or private ETBP walking tour, museum tour, or presentation in 2011.


"Black Paris after WWII" with the American Club of Paris


Celebrating Josephine Baker on "The Black Pearl Walk"


To take advantage of this special offer, send us an e-mail prior to January 31, 2011 at

info[at]discoverparis[dot]net

indicating that you would like to reserve this “ETBP Special Offer” for your trip. Then, contact us six weeks prior to your trip so that we may prepare and ship your self-guided itinerary or assure the availability of a private guide for your desired tour.

We look forward to hearing from you very soon!

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Entrée to Black Paris!™ is a Discover Paris! blog.