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In New Orleans. Taken with a Leica Mini Zoom on Kodak Portra 400 film.

 

Absinthe @ Caesars Palce - Las Vegas NV

I never really felt the same on the trip after drinking this.

We had dinner here last night to celebrate Sean and Blake's birthdays. My dinner was yummy!

Trump National Golf Club

Briarcliff Manor, NY

Absinthe @ Caesars Palce - Las Vegas NV

Basic recipe at www.davidlebovitz.com/archives/2006/07/absinthe_cake.html. This cupcake version uses cake flour and mortar-and-pestle-ground pistachios, which didn't make it anywhere near as dense and gritty as I feared.

Half David's recipe makes twelve tiny delicious cupcakes.

Absinthe is from a local distillery (St. George).

so we opened the gift early. hey, why not?

Musée d'Orsay,

Paris, France

 

Edgar Degas

L'Absinthe 1876

oil on canvas

 

Edgar Degas

Dans un café, also called l'Absinthe, between 1875 and 1876

Oil on canvas

 

The harsh, timeless light suggests the state of mind of the absinthe drinker and her companion, both portrayed by popular models and fellow-denizens of Impressionist circles. The pair, pushed up into the right-hand corner of the frame, are both separated from and connected to the viewer by the cafe's tables.

 

Unlike his Impressionist friends, Degas was an essentially urban painter, who liked to paint the enclosed spaces of stage shows, leisure activities and pleasure spots.

 

In a cafe, a fashionable meeting place, a man and a woman, although sitting side-by-side, are locked in silent isolation, their eyes empty and sad, with drooping features and a general air of desolation. The painting can be seen as a denunciation of the dangers of absinthe, a violent, harmful liquor which was later prohibited. Parallels have been drawn with Zola's novel L'Assommoir written a few years later and indeed the novelist told the painter: "I quite plainly described some of your pictures in more than one place in my pages." The realistic dimension is flagrant: the cafe has been identified – it is "La Nouvelle Athènes", in place Pigalle, a meeting place for modern artists and a hotbed of intellectual bohemians. The framing gives the impression of a snapshot taken by an onlooker at a nearby table. But this impression is deceptive because, in fact, the real life effect is carefully contrived. The picture was painted in the studio and not in the cafe.

 

Degas asked people he knew to pose for the figures: Ellen André was an actress, and an artist's model; Marcellin Desboutin was an engraver and artist. The painting cast a slur on their reputations and Degas had to state publicly that they were not alcoholics.

 

The off-centre framing, introducing empty spaces and slicing off the man's pipe and hand, was inspired by Japanese prints, but Degas uses it here to produce a drunken slewing. The presence of the shadow of the two figures painted as a silhouette reflected in the long mirror behind them is also expressive and significant.

 

www.musee-orsay.fr/en/collections/works-in-focus/painting...

A table in the absinthe den

© Harold Davis

Absinthe @ Caesars Palce - Las Vegas NV

At the Absinthe Depot in Berlin, I was given samples of many fine absinthes. The one I planned to buy is on the far right, Jade Edouard. I ended up buying the much tastier Angelique Suisse Verte, which is only barely visible on the far left.

Absinthe, the "green fairy."

Another day at the office

Another of my father's photos from Mom and Dad's 1973 trip to New Orleans.

 

Roger Dinda photo scanned from a Agfachrome slide.

the grandaddy of all absinthes, pernod, at peche in downtown austin.

It was all too much for Ronan

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Looks bare without the helicopter...

La fée verte!

(photo: Selva Morales)

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I did these labels for handmade absinthe flavors made for Burning Man by my gentleman friend. It was fun!

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