Paris France 🇫🇷 – Paris Juin 2025 – 4K HDR Walking Tour – Paris Walk With Captions
Today I would like to talk to you about Claude Monet but also Apollinaire 🎨 Claude Monet (1840–1926) was the master of Impressionism a painter of fleeting light 🎨 Monet painted over 30 views of the Seine in Paris, chasing the same scene in shifting light and weather. 🌉 He adored bridges, especially those crossing the Seine symbols of movement, transition, and Paris’s living beauty. 🖌️ Monet’s studio overlooked the rooftops of Paris, where he once painted during snowstorms to capture light on silence. He often painted from windows, using Paris’s frames river, rail, rooftop as endless compositions of atmosphere. 🌫️ He said fog and reflections were truer than detail, turning Paris into shimmering layers of mood and memory. His early train station paintings, like Gare Saint-Lazare, stunned critics with clouds of steam and light instead of hard edges. 🏡 Monet was born in Paris, but grew up in Le Havre, where he began sketching boats and coastal skies. 🖼️ He studied at the Académie Suisse in Paris, where he met Pissarro and other future Impressionists. not like the people who painted this murals ^^
I know I have an incredible sense of humor 🎨 Monet rejected academic art, painting outdoors to capture natural light and the moods of real landscapes. 🚂 He lived near Gare Saint-Lazare, where trains and steam inspired his atmospheric series on modernity and motion. 💧 The Seine was his constant subject, from Paris to Argenteuil, he painted its fog, glimmer, and calm endlessly. 🌿 Later in Giverny, he created a world of flowers and ponds, where art and garden became one. 🖌️ Despite early poverty and rejection, Monet continued painting, slowly reshaping how we see color, light, and time. 👨👩👧 Monet struggled financially for years, supporting a young family while often unable to sell his paintings. 🎭 His 1874 exhibition gave “Impressionism” its name, after a critic mocked his painting Impression, Sunrise. 🧑🎨 He shared studios with Renoir and Bazille, forming bonds that shaped the Impressionist movement. 🌦️ He painted in all weather, seeking truth in fog, rain, snow, and sudden Parisian sun. 🛶 The Seine was his open-air studio, where he painted from boats anchored near Paris and its suburbs. 🏥 After cataract surgery, his vision changed and so did his color palette, becoming more vivid and abstract. 🖼️ His series format was revolutionary, capturing cathedrals, haystacks, and bridges under different light and time of day. 🎖️ Late in life, Monet became a national treasure, his work praised by critics who once dismissed him. Let us now move on to Apollinaire, another very fascinating character. 🖋️ Guillaume Apollinaire1880–1918 was oneof the most daring poets of modern Paris voice of the avant-garde, war, and love. 📚 Born in Rome, raised in France, Apollinaire made Paris his artistic battlefield and poetic home. 🖼️ He was a close friend of Picasso, helping shape and name Cubism through bold criticism and passionate essays. 📖 He blended poetry with visual form, creating calligrammes poems arranged like images, fusing word and art. Apollinaire defended modern art fiercely, promoting Braque, Delaunay, ;Duchamp when critics still saw them as nonsense. 💘 He wrote passionate love poems, many inspired by lovers he met in cafés and salons of Montparnasse and Saint-Germain. 📖 His poetry broke tradition, mixing slang, myth, and love reflecting the fragmented spirit of modern Paris. ✒️ He coined the word “Surrealism”, opening the way for poets like Breton and painters like Dalí. “Calligrammes” (1918) fused poetry and image, shaping verses like hearts, rivers, watches turning words into visual emotion. 📚 Apollinaire saw poetry as invention, calling himself a “new Orpheus” a guide for modern souls through chaos. 🏙️ Apollinaire arrived in Paris in 1902, quickly immersing himself in its cafés, literary circles, and avant-garde salons. 🎨 He lived in Montmartre, frequenting Le Bateau-Lavoir with Picasso, Braque, and the early Cubists. ☕ He spent long nights in cafés, writing, debating art, and falling in love with muses and modernity. 📍 His favorite haunts included Saint-Germain and Montparnasse, where ideas flowed as freely as the absinthe. 🖋️ Apollinaire edited literary journals, supporting new voices and stirring controversy across Paris’s cultural landscape. 🕊️ He once walked the Seine for hours, claiming the river’s reflections held better poetry than books. 💌 He sent love letters from train stations, turning Paris into a map of longing and verse. 💌 He sent love letters from train stations, turning Paris into a map of longing and verse. 📚 Apollinaire worked at the Bibliothèque Nationale, absorbing ancient texts while crafting modern poetry in hidden corners. 💘 He fell in love with a noblewoman, Lou, sending her letters and poems while walking Paris in longing. 🎨 Apollinaire championed Picasso’s controversial works, helping Paris understand Cubism before the world caught up. ✍️ His tiny apartments held big ideas, where art, war, love, and modernity collided under candlelight and smoke. 📖 He once said Paris was his “living manuscript”, a city where words, walls, and weather shaped every line. 🕯️ His attic room had no heating, yet he hosted poets, painters, and future legends with wine and wild theories. 📮 He mailed love poems daily to Lou, then burned her replies unread during a jealous rage at Gare d’Austerlitz. 🎭 He wrote surrealist plays in cafés, laughing at scandal as Parisians whispered behind their newspapers. Apollinaire once recited poetry to a stunned bookshop crowd, mixing Latin, slang, and invented words it ended in applause. 🎨 He described Montmartre’s nights as ‘a kaleidoscope of laughter, shadows, and jazz-colored ghosts.’ 💔 After Lou left him, he claimed every Paris bridge reminded him of her especially at sunset. 🎙️ He gave public poetry readings with jazz accompaniment, decades before beat poets thought to try the same.
Join us for a stunning summer walk through the heart of Paris starting at the iconic Eiffel Tower, we stroll through elegant avenues, historic bridges, and vibrant city scenes, all the way to the majestic Louvre Museum.
Along the way, enjoy the sights and atmosphere of the Left Bank, the Seine River, and the timeless charm of central Paris captured in crystal-clear 4K HDR, with captions to guide you through stories, places, and little secrets of the city.
🕵🏻 Today’s Topics: 🎨Claude Monet & Apollinaire
🎧 Real city sounds – no added music
🎥 4K HDR with captions for every place
🌇 Featuring spring ambiance, iconic spots, and hidden corners
@visitingpov #paris #paris2025 @TheParisGuide #Parisapril #pariswalks
Let me know your favorite spot in the comments!
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🌟 Intro: 00:00:00
📍 Trocadéro: 01:27
📍 Pont de Iéna: 13:21
📍 Eiffel Tower: 19:12
📍 Champs de Mars: 27:34
📍 Rue de l’Université: 33:03
📍 Passerelle Debilly: 35:55
📍 Pont Alexandre 3: 38:17
📍 Concorde: 43:44
📍 Jardin des Tuileries: 52:11
📍 Louvre: 01:05:00
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8 Comments
Such a refreshing and original video. Great job
❤
Bonsoir💙🤍♥️🌟
Il y a beaucoup de choses à voir et c'est très attrayant 🗼
Merci V🌹 Cela me rend toujours heureux❤️🔥🥰
à bientôt. bonne nuit💤💤
Bonjour Mesdames et Messieurs, Ils devraient renommer le Trocadéro en Place du Selfie ? Ne vous laissez pas tromper par les canetons mignons, ils grandiront pour devenir des canards méchants, tout comme leurs parents. It is nice to hear some wind in the trees, like echoes of the past. Cheers V ,,,,à plus tard alligator….
57:30 lol at the dude pretending to read a book
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
V你好👋,每次都開心和你行街街❤❤❤👍🙏🥰👋再見💋HK
Jesus God bless ⛪⛪⛪✝️✝️✝️🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲