The exhibition of Yann Arthus Bertrand: 6 billion others
Posted by LN, Thursday 25 June 2009 at 08:14 - Expositions and festivals - Tags
I don’t know if Yann Arthus Bertrand is known abroad. If not, let me introduce him. He is an ecologist or an environmentalist. It is almost the French Al Gore, but as a photographer and not as a politician…
He has made several ecologist events : books about the state of the earth (Earth from above), films also and exhibitions. And he is also interested in mankind and the show 6 billion others is one of them.
This exhibition was first presented in Grand Palais in Paris and, then a smaller city but still the capital of Brittany Rennes and then far away New York… It presents mankind… 5000 interviews in 75 countries and 40 answers to 40 questions.

It is trite to say but sometimes it is very surprising to compare people's responses to issues such as violence, love, belief, happiness ...
Everyone gives his feeling : a man explains that the birth of his son is the Event of his life, another hopes that the trial of Pol Pot will happen sson, for a third one, happiness is easy … Another does not support people repeating again and again. Or when his wife makes bad cooking.… A survivor of a plane crash who loves life ... You can also leave your testimony, in order to reach .... 6 billion others ...
What I did like ?
It is nice to see mankind speaking… The expo in Rennes was presented in a smaller room than Paris – No wonder it is a smaller city ! – So it had to be adapted to this new space. The solution was to change the themes exposed in the 3 yurts every 10 days.
In short, the show is renewed quite often and you can go several times as long you wait 10 days between the visits ...
What I do not like ?
No where you find explanations to understand how they dedided the themes of the 40 questions… Or how they found the people they interviewed… I know everyone can leave its message but I would have liked to know how they began… Is it spontaneous or sorted? And for what? It's a bit embarrassing to see an exhibition and this lack of transparency ... I know it is not a sociologist work but it tries to look like one…
It is also expensive : 10 euros in Paris, 4 in Rennes, I don’t know how much it will be in New York but …I thought the philosophy of Yann Arthus Bertrand was to permit to everyone to see its works…
Specially when you know that lots of sponsors (cities too) give him money to realize his pictures and films, it would be understandable to get a free entrance…
Open every day except Monday and Sunday until the end of August.
Read it in French : L'expo de Yann Arthus Bertrand : 6 milliards d'autres
He has made several ecologist events : books about the state of the earth (Earth from above), films also and exhibitions. And he is also interested in mankind and the show 6 billion others is one of them.
This exhibition was first presented in Grand Palais in Paris and, then a smaller city but still the capital of Brittany Rennes and then far away New York… It presents mankind… 5000 interviews in 75 countries and 40 answers to 40 questions.

It is trite to say but sometimes it is very surprising to compare people's responses to issues such as violence, love, belief, happiness ...
Everyone gives his feeling : a man explains that the birth of his son is the Event of his life, another hopes that the trial of Pol Pot will happen sson, for a third one, happiness is easy … Another does not support people repeating again and again. Or when his wife makes bad cooking.… A survivor of a plane crash who loves life ... You can also leave your testimony, in order to reach .... 6 billion others ...
What I did like ?
It is nice to see mankind speaking… The expo in Rennes was presented in a smaller room than Paris – No wonder it is a smaller city ! – So it had to be adapted to this new space. The solution was to change the themes exposed in the 3 yurts every 10 days.
In short, the show is renewed quite often and you can go several times as long you wait 10 days between the visits ...
What I do not like ?
No where you find explanations to understand how they dedided the themes of the 40 questions… Or how they found the people they interviewed… I know everyone can leave its message but I would have liked to know how they began… Is it spontaneous or sorted? And for what? It's a bit embarrassing to see an exhibition and this lack of transparency ... I know it is not a sociologist work but it tries to look like one…
It is also expensive : 10 euros in Paris, 4 in Rennes, I don’t know how much it will be in New York but …I thought the philosophy of Yann Arthus Bertrand was to permit to everyone to see its works…
Specially when you know that lots of sponsors (cities too) give him money to realize his pictures and films, it would be understandable to get a free entrance…
Open every day except Monday and Sunday until the end of August.
Read it in French : L'expo de Yann Arthus Bertrand : 6 milliards d'autres
Read also :
Mammoths are back in Brittany (France) for an exhibition at les Champs Libres (Rennes)
Posted by LN - Tags
What are they doing, those mammoths, here in Brittany…
Well, they used to live there long long ago… when ice was everywhere and Britain and Brittany did belong to the same land...
They’re back. Because of the Parisians.Yes, the exhibition you can discover in Rennes was conceived for the National Museum of Natural History in Paris a few years ago and it is now adapted for a smaller place, l’Espace des Sciences at Rennes.
And if I do speak about it, it is because the whole expo is subtitled in English … or translated as you want…

The expo is called At the time of mammoths, it is nice ... I have just spent an hour and a half with my young nephew (6 years old).
The tour begins with all possible fantasies that existed when men discovered those huge bones. People attributed those pieces of skeleton to imaginary figures ... until a whole mammoth was found and one could imagine the disappeared animal.
The exhibition then explains the time of glaciation, the climate, and the BEAST.
You can touch things (I won’t tell you what, you’ll discover it by yourself) and it is nice to do.
Then we live the everyday life with our forebears who lived at that time…In short we become experts in the woolly mammoth.
The exhibition also shows the local history with a short film on Mont Dol (you know the mountain we have between Cancale, the oyster city and the Mont Saint Michel !) where the remains of mammoths have been found during the 19th century. It ends with a long movie whose hero is ... this big animal, which is a good resumé of everything we have learned visiting the expo.
I (we) really liked it but we were almost alone in the expo. But the problem with Champs Libres is often the same, rooms are small and sounds clink…
I needed to concentrate to hear the soundtrack for the documentary on Mount Dol, (which I found rather interesting), especially when my nephew was listening to the weather report next to me.
The children and the mammoths?
From 6 years old, indicates the brochure. My young acolyte found it nice to try the trunk or to see a baby mammoth… a real one named Dami and usually living in a Belgian Museum. He did like to touch elephant skin and to compare it to the missing pachyderm.
My young friend was really interested in the life of mammoths. So he loved the exhibition. But sometimes it is nice to help the child through : lots to read… less in English though !!
The film at the end of the exhibition sums up the entire expo and it is so real, you feel like being back some thousands years ago…
In short, the adult (I) was not bored (not at all) and my nephew either. We did enjoy it. Not in front of the same things or stands, but whatever.
At the exit, a "true woolly mammoth" is watching you...
4 € for adults and 3 for 8 years old and older.
From Tuesday to Sunday (12h - 19h on weekdays and 14-19 on weekends), 21h night until Tuesday. Until March 7, 2010.
Read it in French : Les mammouths arrivent et reviennent à Rennes, une exposition à l'Espace des Sciences aux Champs Libres
Well, they used to live there long long ago… when ice was everywhere and Britain and Brittany did belong to the same land...
They’re back. Because of the Parisians.Yes, the exhibition you can discover in Rennes was conceived for the National Museum of Natural History in Paris a few years ago and it is now adapted for a smaller place, l’Espace des Sciences at Rennes.
And if I do speak about it, it is because the whole expo is subtitled in English … or translated as you want…

The expo is called At the time of mammoths, it is nice ... I have just spent an hour and a half with my young nephew (6 years old).
The tour begins with all possible fantasies that existed when men discovered those huge bones. People attributed those pieces of skeleton to imaginary figures ... until a whole mammoth was found and one could imagine the disappeared animal.
The exhibition then explains the time of glaciation, the climate, and the BEAST.
You can touch things (I won’t tell you what, you’ll discover it by yourself) and it is nice to do.
Then we live the everyday life with our forebears who lived at that time…In short we become experts in the woolly mammoth.
The exhibition also shows the local history with a short film on Mont Dol (you know the mountain we have between Cancale, the oyster city and the Mont Saint Michel !) where the remains of mammoths have been found during the 19th century. It ends with a long movie whose hero is ... this big animal, which is a good resumé of everything we have learned visiting the expo.
I (we) really liked it but we were almost alone in the expo. But the problem with Champs Libres is often the same, rooms are small and sounds clink…
I needed to concentrate to hear the soundtrack for the documentary on Mount Dol, (which I found rather interesting), especially when my nephew was listening to the weather report next to me.
The children and the mammoths?
From 6 years old, indicates the brochure. My young acolyte found it nice to try the trunk or to see a baby mammoth… a real one named Dami and usually living in a Belgian Museum. He did like to touch elephant skin and to compare it to the missing pachyderm.
My young friend was really interested in the life of mammoths. So he loved the exhibition. But sometimes it is nice to help the child through : lots to read… less in English though !!
The film at the end of the exhibition sums up the entire expo and it is so real, you feel like being back some thousands years ago…
In short, the adult (I) was not bored (not at all) and my nephew either. We did enjoy it. Not in front of the same things or stands, but whatever.
At the exit, a "true woolly mammoth" is watching you...
4 € for adults and 3 for 8 years old and older.
From Tuesday to Sunday (12h - 19h on weekdays and 14-19 on weekends), 21h night until Tuesday. Until March 7, 2010.
Read it in French : Les mammouths arrivent et reviennent à Rennes, une exposition à l'Espace des Sciences aux Champs Libres
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Exhibition of African Art in Dinard (Brittany, France) : about the roles of women in the African society.
Posted by LN - Tags
What can you do in Dinard when it rains… discover African Art. Every year at the Palais des Arts in Dinard (on the seafront and close to the casino), you can discover a nice art exhibition : last year it was Picasso… This year, the exhibition called Gloire de la femme dans l'art africain (litterally glory to women in African Art) shows 200 pieces of African Art connected with women and their roles in African Art and Society.
It is open from june 28th to september 14th (a Sunday) 2008, every day from 2 pm to 7 pm. And it is free…
It is a really nice aesthetic exhibit. The objects are from the XIXth and XXth century, you ‘ll see masks, statues, stools, woodlocks, pearls’jewels…that explains the role of woman in african society. The different rooms present various women’sides such as maternity, fertility, couple, initiation figure,… thanks to a sign, each room explains some part of the african culture. For example, you will learn that scarifications around women’ navel symbolizes the links to the world or that twins have a very special status in Africa. As a fertility symbol, they are feared and revered at the same time. And the Yoruba people (Nigeria) have the highest rate of twins in the world (45,1 for 1000 births) compared to Europe (10,9). And we still don’t know why !
And if you want your kids to improve their french, a guide in french !!! will reveal the secrets of African Art on Tuesday and Thursday afternoon. For the 4-8 years old at 4.30 pm, and for the 8-12 years old at 2.30pm. Hurry up, it lasts till mid september.
Read it in French : L'art africain en Bretagne à Dinard
It is open from june 28th to september 14th (a Sunday) 2008, every day from 2 pm to 7 pm. And it is free…
It is a really nice aesthetic exhibit. The objects are from the XIXth and XXth century, you ‘ll see masks, statues, stools, woodlocks, pearls’jewels…that explains the role of woman in african society. The different rooms present various women’sides such as maternity, fertility, couple, initiation figure,… thanks to a sign, each room explains some part of the african culture. For example, you will learn that scarifications around women’ navel symbolizes the links to the world or that twins have a very special status in Africa. As a fertility symbol, they are feared and revered at the same time. And the Yoruba people (Nigeria) have the highest rate of twins in the world (45,1 for 1000 births) compared to Europe (10,9). And we still don’t know why !
And if you want your kids to improve their french, a guide in french !!! will reveal the secrets of African Art on Tuesday and Thursday afternoon. For the 4-8 years old at 4.30 pm, and for the 8-12 years old at 2.30pm. Hurry up, it lasts till mid september.
Read it in French : L'art africain en Bretagne à Dinard
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The global threat of climate change : 5 candidates did the test
Posted by LN - Tags
Yes... in these unstable times, climate changes and warm worries, how to find the ecologically correct ?
With the Copenhagen summit, one is forced to wonder and to ask questions and to look all over, in front, below, above and on the sides to try to find an answer! Have you any tips to reduce your environmental impact, your carbon emissions?
Have you ever wondered what is your carbon footprint ? in CO2 ? in tonnes of carbon ? in greenhouse gas ? in carbon credits ? In other words, are you more methane? Or carbon dioxide?
Who do you think won the prize (carbon credits) from these competitors?
He has no car, travels by bus or bicycle, depending. No more trips, he prefers to surf the net ... and pee (sic) in the shower. Only a small pleasure red bleeding meat .... once a day ....
- 250 kg of beef, 100 kg calf (candidate 4)
- 12 000 km of city car or 8500 miles per year with a four wheel vehicule (candidate 2)
- A year of fuel heating, 3 years of electric heating (candidate 5)
- A flight from Paris to New York (candidate 1 and 3)
Result: they all won the race ...
I did the test ... to calculate the ecological footprint for myself and family ...
It's easy to do, interesting and only takes a few minutes.
Currently the average footprint of a French is 4.9 hectares, 9.2 hectares for an American and 1.4 hectare for an African. The footprint for sustainable living all that well on this land is 2.1 hectares.
Read this article in French : Consommation de tonnes de carbone de C02 ou de gaz carbonique
With the Copenhagen summit, one is forced to wonder and to ask questions and to look all over, in front, below, above and on the sides to try to find an answer! Have you any tips to reduce your environmental impact, your carbon emissions?
Have you ever wondered what is your carbon footprint ? in CO2 ? in tonnes of carbon ? in greenhouse gas ? in carbon credits ? In other words, are you more methane? Or carbon dioxide?
Who do you think won the prize (carbon credits) from these competitors?
1 - Our first volunteer is a French, he has a good job in a big business, his house is heated with wood, he uses low consumption lamps and takes all morning his bike (10 miles to go and 10 return) to reach his workplace. 4 times a year he flights from Paris to New York ... for his work!2 - Our second candidate is a 4 wheel vehicule Canadian driver. He lives on the coast. He goes hunting every weekend in a forest 30 kilometers from home. He has a wind turbine in his garden. And during the summer time, he likes to stay home and enjoy the sea... No need for vacation far away.
3 - The third competitor is a she : a hiker, a walker, retired, who abandoned her car long ago and only uses public transport to go around.4 - Our fourth participant is a young American student. He has long forgotten the paper and handles all correspondence, invoices and other items through Internet.
Vegetarian, she also stopped eating fish and buys only local products. She lives in an appartment with high isolation. Her delight is to hike in the Atlas of Morocco, in the Andes of South America ...
He has no car, travels by bus or bicycle, depending. No more trips, he prefers to surf the net ... and pee (sic) in the shower. Only a small pleasure red bleeding meat .... once a day ....
5 – Fifth candidate: a young couple who lives in an old house. Far from a big city, they organize with their neighbors by carpooling to work. A small garden for vegetables, furniture made of recycled materials...They can not stand the cold and live in an apartment warm heated ... 25° ...The results of the competition are as follows : consumption of carbon credits
- 250 kg of beef, 100 kg calf (candidate 4)
- 12 000 km of city car or 8500 miles per year with a four wheel vehicule (candidate 2)
- A year of fuel heating, 3 years of electric heating (candidate 5)
- A flight from Paris to New York (candidate 1 and 3)
Result: they all won the race ...
I did the test ... to calculate the ecological footprint for myself and family ...
It's easy to do, interesting and only takes a few minutes.
Currently the average footprint of a French is 4.9 hectares, 9.2 hectares for an American and 1.4 hectare for an African. The footprint for sustainable living all that well on this land is 2.1 hectares.
Read this article in French : Consommation de tonnes de carbone de C02 ou de gaz carbonique
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Old pictures from Britain at the Albert Kahn Museum in Paris (France)
Posted by LN - Tags
For nostalgic people, Parisians in love with Britain, for lovers of the past, the exhibition Bretagne, voyager en couleurs (1907-1929), (Britain, travel colors) presents 140 colour photographies (autochromes) and several films on the region at the beginning of the century.
It begins with an explanation of what is an autochrome (invented by the Lumiere brothers,it is an industrial process to realize colour photograph),... and how the Parisians of the time went practice their autochromes'art in small Britain. The tourist guides then depicted the region as "authentic", photographers did visit it for its "folk", as if it were a foreign country... and it was a hobby for the photographers to achieve good "snapshots" of a folk Brittany ...
The autochromes in the museum represent the picturesque side of the Bretons: men in costume, women in traditional headdress, traditional villages with children in wooden shoes, mythical landscapes, sunsets, religious ceremonies... Good pictures of small Britain ... that are even used today … as clichés... There are also videos.The works presented include collections of the Albert Kahn Museum or the Musée de Bretagne.
The museum is named after the banker and philanthropist pacifist Albert Kahn (1860-1940) and has the largest collection in the world of autochromes (over 72000).
Who was Albert Kahn ?
A singular man, a visionary: he had understood that the world was changing and that the traditional ways of life would disappear. For twenty years (1909 to 1931), he recruited photographers to go capture the world's memory in about fifty countries, the future foundation of the Archives de la planète. Most of the museum's collection is the work of these witnesses ...
The museum has also beautiful gardens... Albert Kahn was also an idealist and an utopian. He created those gardens to reconcile people and to bring in one place an English garden, a French garden and a Japanese garden (he is familiar with Japan), a Vosges forest, a forest with "blue trees", a meadow ... All the gardens are open to the public.
The museum (www.albert-kahn.fr/) is in Boulogne-Billancourt, Hauts-de-Seine (Metro Boulogne Pont de Saint-Cloud (line 10). And the exhibition runs until July 4, 2010. 11 am to 6 pm.
Read this article in French : Clichés de la Bretagne à Paris au musée Albert Kahn
It begins with an explanation of what is an autochrome (invented by the Lumiere brothers,it is an industrial process to realize colour photograph),... and how the Parisians of the time went practice their autochromes'art in small Britain. The tourist guides then depicted the region as "authentic", photographers did visit it for its "folk", as if it were a foreign country... and it was a hobby for the photographers to achieve good "snapshots" of a folk Brittany ...
The autochromes in the museum represent the picturesque side of the Bretons: men in costume, women in traditional headdress, traditional villages with children in wooden shoes, mythical landscapes, sunsets, religious ceremonies... Good pictures of small Britain ... that are even used today … as clichés... There are also videos.The works presented include collections of the Albert Kahn Museum or the Musée de Bretagne.
The museum is named after the banker and philanthropist pacifist Albert Kahn (1860-1940) and has the largest collection in the world of autochromes (over 72000).
Who was Albert Kahn ?
A singular man, a visionary: he had understood that the world was changing and that the traditional ways of life would disappear. For twenty years (1909 to 1931), he recruited photographers to go capture the world's memory in about fifty countries, the future foundation of the Archives de la planète. Most of the museum's collection is the work of these witnesses ...
The museum has also beautiful gardens... Albert Kahn was also an idealist and an utopian. He created those gardens to reconcile people and to bring in one place an English garden, a French garden and a Japanese garden (he is familiar with Japan), a Vosges forest, a forest with "blue trees", a meadow ... All the gardens are open to the public.
The museum (www.albert-kahn.fr/) is in Boulogne-Billancourt, Hauts-de-Seine (Metro Boulogne Pont de Saint-Cloud (line 10). And the exhibition runs until July 4, 2010. 11 am to 6 pm.
Read this article in French : Clichés de la Bretagne à Paris au musée Albert Kahn
Exhibition of contemporary art (Pinault) at the Palais des Arts de Dinard (France)
Posted by LN - Tags
This year, the Palais des Arts is celebrating its 20th anniversary ... and for this event it hosts part of the private collections of the François Pinault Foundation.
Do you know François Pinault ? He is THE famous Breton billionaire. Autodidact, art lover… and football fan ... He is the main sponsor of the foot ball team Stade Rennais.
So for its 20th birthday, Dinard has decided to expose the collections of this man… who usually shows them in Venice, yes, in Italy.
About 60 works by thirty artists * ...

Qui a peur des artistes ? Who is afraid of artists?
Not me, except when I look at the picture, it reminds me of Verdun (horrible battle of the 1st World War wtih thousands of deads), the soldier buried standing (alive?) ...
But everyone sees what he wants : I thought it was a commercial for Hunger in Africa ... someone said...
Annoying the poster? And the title?
What is art done for?If your score is 3 points or more, go ahead!
- To have fun ? (123 points)
- To ask questions ? (54321 points)
– To understand the world ? (393 points)
– To criticize it ? (3131 points)
– To be nice (333 points)
- To mess around ? (731 points)
- Do nothing ? (34536 points) -
- To laugh and have fun (0.333333333333)
- To be moral ? (321 points)
- To be green ? (369 points)
- What else ?
- To share (4.50 euros full price, the show last year was free)
The exhibition shows contemporary art : portraits, contemporary art paintings, photography, photo-collages, drawings, video, sculpture, abstract works ... All art forms are represented ... Each room has a title ...for example-War Consumption Revolt.
Well, not easy to give my opinion. Jeff Wall bothers with the photo showing the ambush in Afghanistan. Further it is even more violent (the video ...). It is the same artist Adel Abdessemed who made the funny pictures on the opposite wall!
The most famous : la nona hora ((the ninth hour is the name for the prayer that is recited at the ninth hour of the day, usually around 3PM to commemorate the moment when Christ died on the Cross) by Maurizio Cattelan. The most famous or the one everybody talked about ? Write your comment for that work !
And next to it, nobody screamed at Damien Hirst, the greens don’t like contemporary art ? But I do not know anything about insects ...
In short, everyone has his reading and interpretation ... Make your own opinion ... because as François Pinault said and I translate : ... The art has led me to wonder more. To keep my eyes open on the world and its evolutions, to be more attentive to the change of the world ...
This summer, if you don’t have time to visit the Palazzo Grazzi museum or the new one at Punta della Dogana (Venice, Italy), where the rest of the collections are, or if you missed the exhibition in Moscow (a certain state of world), go to ... Dinard from 14 June to 13 September from 11 am to 19 pm and night (21h) on Friday.
Pictures are not allowed...
* Josef Albers, Dan Flavin, Agnes Martin, Lucio Fontana, Piero Manzoni, Lee Ufans, Pierre Soulages, Charles Matton, Takashi Murakami, Paul McCarthy, Yan Pei-Ming Martial Raysse, Ed Ruscha, Adel Abdessemed, Andreas Gursky, Barbara Kruger , Cindy Sherman, Jeff Wall, Jiechang Yang, Chen Zhen. Subodh Gupta, Mike Kelley, Bharti Kher, Takashi Murakami, Julie Mehretu, Luc Tuymans, Maurizio Cattelan, Paul Fryer, Damien Hirst, Claude Lêvêque, Yan Pei-Ming, Andres Serrano. Subodh Gupta, Mike Kelley, Bharti Kher, Takashi Murakami, Julie Mehretu, Luc Tuymans, Maurizio Cattelan, Paul Fryer, Damien Hirst, Claude Lévêque, Yan Pei-Ming, Andres Serrano.
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Wine and food Festival in France : Vini Circus
Posted by LN - Tags
... You like wine .... natural and good ones ... and local food, typical local meals... Then follow me... to Vini Circus ...
In the French village Dingé or Hédé (it's like good wine, it depends on the year) since 2004, April begins with a party for wine lovers ... and good food amateurs.
There is a lot to do during the week end : from Friday evening 7 pm to Monday 1 am, all sorts of things are possible. During the day, you'll learn, while sipping a glass, the French cuisine's secrets thanks to cooking demonstrations with French famous chefs. Or, if you're there just as a wine fan, follow the wine talks that bring together specialists speaking about their favorite drink.
There are numerous exhibitors: fifty vineyards (no Bretons, thank God, they do not know how to make wine! …). There are also breweries, cider producers... and representatives of other local French specialities ... butter, oysters, charcuterie (prepared meats products), bread ... The exhibition is international ... Exhibitors from Italy and Belgium are also presents...
Artists and sculptors are also here with their creations.
3 nights of festivities will take place during the wine weekend ... concerts (programme is on their website) and especially winemakers menu ... For two evening meals and nights (Saturday and Sunday until 2 am)... Not to be missed ...
So, after a perfect dinner and the best wines you have ever tasted … you have to come back home... No worry... if you're staying in a nice hotel in Rennes, you are spoiled … On the way in, you take the train at the gare de Rennes, someone will pick you up at the station of Montreuil sur Ille ... and after the meal, at 2 am , there is a departure by bus which goes directly back to the Breton capital (I mean Rennes …).
A shuttle service also brings back home the other festival lovers ... 15 km around. Better though, the wine is at will ...
Read this article in French : Festival des vins et des bonnes choses : Vini Circus
In the French village Dingé or Hédé (it's like good wine, it depends on the year) since 2004, April begins with a party for wine lovers ... and good food amateurs.
There is a lot to do during the week end : from Friday evening 7 pm to Monday 1 am, all sorts of things are possible. During the day, you'll learn, while sipping a glass, the French cuisine's secrets thanks to cooking demonstrations with French famous chefs. Or, if you're there just as a wine fan, follow the wine talks that bring together specialists speaking about their favorite drink.
There are numerous exhibitors: fifty vineyards (no Bretons, thank God, they do not know how to make wine! …). There are also breweries, cider producers... and representatives of other local French specialities ... butter, oysters, charcuterie (prepared meats products), bread ... The exhibition is international ... Exhibitors from Italy and Belgium are also presents...
Artists and sculptors are also here with their creations.
3 nights of festivities will take place during the wine weekend ... concerts (programme is on their website) and especially winemakers menu ... For two evening meals and nights (Saturday and Sunday until 2 am)... Not to be missed ...
So, after a perfect dinner and the best wines you have ever tasted … you have to come back home... No worry... if you're staying in a nice hotel in Rennes, you are spoiled … On the way in, you take the train at the gare de Rennes, someone will pick you up at the station of Montreuil sur Ille ... and after the meal, at 2 am , there is a departure by bus which goes directly back to the Breton capital (I mean Rennes …).
A shuttle service also brings back home the other festival lovers ... 15 km around. Better though, the wine is at will ...
Read this article in French : Festival des vins et des bonnes choses : Vini Circus
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Visiting barefoot the gardens of Brocéliande (les jardins de Brocéliande) at Bréal sous Montfort (Ille et Vilaine), Brittany, France.
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Since june, the gardens of Broceliande (les jardins de Brocéliande) are advertising for their new programme Réveille tes pieds (litteraly wake up your feet) and we went there with two young kids (btw 2 and 3 years old). We took off our shoes and we did it. It is a lot of fun…
From Rennes on the highway, you have to drive south (direction Lorient) about 15 minutes to go to the gardens. Go out when you see the sign Bréal sous Montfort, and follow the signs for jardins de Brocéliande. You’ ll soon arrive in front of an old farm with an orchard, toboggans and swings.
The garden is huge (24 hectares) and shows several exhibitions : exhibition about amateur gardens,
different animal breeds (hens, and poultry, pigs, breton cows (called pie noire), sheep, horses…, a route about Brocéliande, botanic garden, birds nesting… and plenty of others activities. You can spend the day there… . At noon you can also eat in the restaurant traditional food for 10 €.
It is open from Eastern to All Saint’s Day, tuesday to saturday from 1.30 pm. It costs 6,5 € for an adult, 3€ for kids (over 6), 3,5€ for students and 15€ for a family. You have so many things to do, (you’ve got for your money worth).
Let ‘s go back to our feet… Before arriving to the barefoot walk, you cross a small part of the garden, you meet poultry, pigs, horses and you discover some of the amateur gardens. When you arrive in front of waterplays , you’re there.

You have to leave your shoes in a shoelocker and here you are, barefoot, ready to start.
The beginnig is quite classical : sand, pebbles, stones.

But then you will walk on 45 different surfaces and it is really nice. You will see tobbogans, labyrinth, distorting mirror and a long jump place where you can compare the jumping performances of animals (rabbit, stag, squirrel…).
After more than an hour, you go back to where you began and to your locker. Wash your feet in the fountain and continue the visit of the garden. The dahlia labyrinth is really nice.
Leaving the garden, you have a small shop where you can buy vegetables and fruits from the garden and breton specialities (honey, jam, cider, beers…)
Read it in French : Visitez pieds nus les Jardins de Brocéliande à Bréal sous Montfort (Ille et Vilaine), Bretagne
From Rennes on the highway, you have to drive south (direction Lorient) about 15 minutes to go to the gardens. Go out when you see the sign Bréal sous Montfort, and follow the signs for jardins de Brocéliande. You’ ll soon arrive in front of an old farm with an orchard, toboggans and swings.
The garden is huge (24 hectares) and shows several exhibitions : exhibition about amateur gardens,
different animal breeds (hens, and poultry, pigs, breton cows (called pie noire), sheep, horses…, a route about Brocéliande, botanic garden, birds nesting… and plenty of others activities. You can spend the day there… . At noon you can also eat in the restaurant traditional food for 10 €.
It is open from Eastern to All Saint’s Day, tuesday to saturday from 1.30 pm. It costs 6,5 € for an adult, 3€ for kids (over 6), 3,5€ for students and 15€ for a family. You have so many things to do, (you’ve got for your money worth).
Let ‘s go back to our feet… Before arriving to the barefoot walk, you cross a small part of the garden, you meet poultry, pigs, horses and you discover some of the amateur gardens. When you arrive in front of waterplays , you’re there.
You have to leave your shoes in a shoelocker and here you are, barefoot, ready to start.
The beginnig is quite classical : sand, pebbles, stones.
But then you will walk on 45 different surfaces and it is really nice. You will see tobbogans, labyrinth, distorting mirror and a long jump place where you can compare the jumping performances of animals (rabbit, stag, squirrel…).
After more than an hour, you go back to where you began and to your locker. Wash your feet in the fountain and continue the visit of the garden. The dahlia labyrinth is really nice.
Leaving the garden, you have a small shop where you can buy vegetables and fruits from the garden and breton specialities (honey, jam, cider, beers…)
Read it in French : Visitez pieds nus les Jardins de Brocéliande à Bréal sous Montfort (Ille et Vilaine), Bretagne
Visit the surroundings of Rennes in Brittany France with kids, Visiting barefoot a breton garden in Brittany france, Where to see breton breeds in France, Animal and kids in brittany France, Having fun in Brittany (France) with kids, Eating traditional food in a garden in Brittany France, Buying local products in a breton garden in brittany france, Where can you find waterplays for kids in Brittany france, Visit a dahlia labyrinth in brittany France, Visit an amateur garden in brittany France, Visiting Brittany (France) with kids, Touring in a garden (the jardins de Broceliande) in Brittany france, Gardens and tourism in brittany france, Tourism with kids in Brittany
Visit of the fort of Aleth at Saint Servan (district of Saint Malo, France) and the Memorial 1939-45
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Brittany was a very important strategic place during the Second World War. German militaries defended the breton region with the building of fortifications, the Atlantik wall along the atlantik coast (from Danemark to France). Bunkers but also antitank obstacles, concrete pillboxes to house machine guns... were done.
They also transformed the ports of Saint Nazaire, Brest, Lorient et Saint Malo into fortresses.
That’s for the main context. Let’s go now to Saint Malo and one of its district Saint Servan. (Saint Servan is part of the municipality of Saint Malo since 1967). The fortifications of Saint Malo were designed by Vauban (1663-1707), Marshal of France and famous military engineer. He also wanted Saint Servan to be strengthened and specially the cité d’Aleth, the outposts to the Rance estuary.

But it was done much later when the peninsula suffered from a British assault. In 1758, the major Marlborough invaded the Aleth peninsula and was thinking of doing the same in Saint Malo when he was shelled. He left the peninsula but did burn all the ships around before leaving the place. It did not take long, in 1759, one year later, Mazin, a French engineer began to build an artillery fort

to protect the estuary.

Almost 200 years later, the fort was strengthened by the Germans : you can visit the Mémorial 39-45,
situated in the middle of the peninsula, in a large coutyard. The Museum is located in one of the bunkers of the fortifications, you’ll see a documentary and an exhibition about the WWII.
On the platform, about 30 bunkers

were erected joined by underground passages with pillboxes.

The whole region was fortified : Cézembre, the island in front of you, the pointe de la Varde (Varde’s cape at the end of the long beach of Saint Malo), a radar at Cap Fréhel… The fort of Saint Servan was the German headquarter with the commandor Von Aulock.
The Allies invaded Normandy in June and arrived at Saint Malo August 2d. But they were not many to conquer the place, most of them were fighting in Normandy. The Allies decided to shell Saint Malo and after 15 days of intense bombings,
the German surrendered (august 17th). More than 70% of Saint Malo was destroyed and it lasted 12 years to rebuild the city like it was (1948-1960).
The island of Cézembre held out untill September 2d (site de l’inventaire général du patrimoine culturel). 80 bunkers were built there to control the port of Saint Malo and it is the more bombed place on the French territory.
Napalm bombs were dropped on it. Unexploded shells are still on the island and have to be defused. It is still a no trespassing zone on most of the place.
From the courtyard, you have a really nice view : on your right of Saint Malo, in front of you Dinard
and on your left, the Rance estuary.
Read it in French : Visite du fort de la Cité d'Aleth à Saint Servan, quartier de saint Malo (Bretagne)
They also transformed the ports of Saint Nazaire, Brest, Lorient et Saint Malo into fortresses.

That’s for the main context. Let’s go now to Saint Malo and one of its district Saint Servan. (Saint Servan is part of the municipality of Saint Malo since 1967). The fortifications of Saint Malo were designed by Vauban (1663-1707), Marshal of France and famous military engineer. He also wanted Saint Servan to be strengthened and specially the cité d’Aleth, the outposts to the Rance estuary.

But it was done much later when the peninsula suffered from a British assault. In 1758, the major Marlborough invaded the Aleth peninsula and was thinking of doing the same in Saint Malo when he was shelled. He left the peninsula but did burn all the ships around before leaving the place. It did not take long, in 1759, one year later, Mazin, a French engineer began to build an artillery fort

to protect the estuary.

Almost 200 years later, the fort was strengthened by the Germans : you can visit the Mémorial 39-45,

situated in the middle of the peninsula, in a large coutyard. The Museum is located in one of the bunkers of the fortifications, you’ll see a documentary and an exhibition about the WWII.
On the platform, about 30 bunkers


were erected joined by underground passages with pillboxes.

The whole region was fortified : Cézembre, the island in front of you, the pointe de la Varde (Varde’s cape at the end of the long beach of Saint Malo), a radar at Cap Fréhel… The fort of Saint Servan was the German headquarter with the commandor Von Aulock.
The Allies invaded Normandy in June and arrived at Saint Malo August 2d. But they were not many to conquer the place, most of them were fighting in Normandy. The Allies decided to shell Saint Malo and after 15 days of intense bombings,

the German surrendered (august 17th). More than 70% of Saint Malo was destroyed and it lasted 12 years to rebuild the city like it was (1948-1960).
The island of Cézembre held out untill September 2d (site de l’inventaire général du patrimoine culturel). 80 bunkers were built there to control the port of Saint Malo and it is the more bombed place on the French territory.

Napalm bombs were dropped on it. Unexploded shells are still on the island and have to be defused. It is still a no trespassing zone on most of the place.
From the courtyard, you have a really nice view : on your right of Saint Malo, in front of you Dinard

and on your left, the Rance estuary.
Read it in French : Visite du fort de la Cité d'Aleth à Saint Servan, quartier de saint Malo (Bretagne)
Cézembre and the bombs of the WWII, Cezembre island a forbidden zone in France, the second World War in Saint Malo Brittany France, liberation of Saint Malo by the Allied troops, American troops in Saint Malo during the second World War, Major Marlborough at Saint Malo in 1759, the city fort of Aleth in Saint Malo brittany france, the atlantik wall in Brittany, forteresses of Vauban in France, Von Aulock and the second World War in Saint Malo France

French