Tag Archives: john minihan

Your Local Street Market – rue Daguerre in the 14th

I love two things in particular about the market on rue Daguerre. Firstly it is a daily market (except Sundays) and secondly, it really is for local residents and has no pretentions about targeting tourists.

Daguerre Maree sells every type of fresh fish but also great dishfuls of ready to heat paella. There are top quality cheese, fresh fruit and vegetables, bread and wine stalls/shops and unusually, interspersed with one or two excellent bar/brasseries of which my favourite is La Chope Daguerre.

A liitle aside for you is that the street takes it’s name from Louis Daguerre, the inventor of photogrphy – my photographer friend John Minihan stayed in one of our apartments (MONTPAR07) on the street last year and wrote about him and Samuel Beckett who lived in the neighbourhood.

Rue Daguerre would be your local market  if you were renting an apartment in the 14th, near or on avenue du General Leclerc, bld Saint Jacques and the residential area between avenue du Maine and Cimetiere du Montparnasse. The market is just across from  Denfert Rochereau station (RER B and Metro lines 4 and 6).

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John Minihan’s “Beckett’s Paris” exhibition sponsored by Paris Apartments by Numbers running until 25th June at the Alliance Francaise

Fashion Designer, Pierre Cardin, photographed by John Minihan in Paris in 1983

Samuel Beckett photographed by John Minihan on bld. St Jacques.Paris,1985

Francis Bacon photographed by John Minihan in Paris, 1977

Beckett’s Paris, the exhibition of Irish Photographer John Minihan’s photographs of Samuel Beckett and his contemporaries in Paris, will continue to run until 25th June in the Alliance Francaise in Dublin. Drop into the Cafe des Amis at their base in Kildare st and enjoy their excellent coffee while you browse John’s black and white images of Beckett and his contemporaries in the City of Light.

Better still, head to Paris, stay like John did in one of our apartments and see the settings for his photographs.

Paris – “City of Light” for photographers, by The Irish Photographer, John Minihan

The Irish Photographer, John Minihan, stayed with Paris Apartments by Numbers in our apartment MONTPAR07, from 25th to 30th May 2010.

He was in Paris to revisit the cafes and haunts of Samuel Beckett whom he photographed there through the 1980′s and he kindly wrote a piece for us on his return to the City of Light:

“I am a camera”, the phrase belongs to the writer Christopher Isherwood but becomes part of who I am when I am in Paris. Since the mid 60‟s I have been visiting the City of Light, always staying in hotels, when the taxi stopped outside my apartment on the Rue Daguerre, a name synonymous with photography. It was Louis Daguerre who exclaimed, “I have arrested the light”, that was in 1839, when the French Academy of Sciences announced it’s arrival to the world, photography was invented. Paris became the home to some of the most important practitioners of the art, Nadar, Jacques Henry Latigue, Eugene Atget, Man Ray, André Kertese, Brassaï, among the many.

As I looked out from my second floor apartment that would be my home for a week, the shuttered windows looking down into a quiet courtyard, not unlike what the Dublin born artist Francis Bacon lived in for the few years in the 70‟s when he stayed in Paris, I could not wait to explore the Montparnasse that I know and love and the welcoming atmosphere of the many cafés on Rue Daguerre and its side streets. After a short walk to the Boulevard du Montparnasse and its many famous literary cafés, la Coupole, The Dome, I stopped for a drink at the Falstaff a café bar around the corner from La Coupole. Samuel Beckett would often meet and entertain his friends at La Couple. He would escape to drink and play snooker at the Falstaff. Paris has always been a visual and literary city, where life’s sweetness still lingers.

As I walk in the Rue de-l‟Odeon I think of James Joyce who often went to see his friend Sylvia Beach, a young American who opened a bookshop called Shakespeare and Co‟ in the early 1920‟s. Back in 1985 I took a self-portrait in the window of what was the original shop, not out of vanity, but to remind myself of that week-end spent with Samuel Beckett where I took what‟s now become the iconic image of the writer.

My apartment was close to cemetery Montparnasse and before I set out each day I would walk to pay my respects to Samuel Beckett who died in 1989 and is buried there with his wife Suzzanne. People always leave little notes on his grave, also the graves of the photographer‟s Man Ray and Brassaï. Samuel Beckett was a friend of Brassaï who photographed the writer. One of the most pleasant surprises was finding a small restaurant-bar called, Au Vin des Rues“, on the Rue Boulard just off Rue Daguerre. It was the favoured café of the photographer Robert Doisneau, who we all know as the man who took the photograph of The Kiss near the Hotel de Ville.
Paris has popularised photography and the cinema, it’s a great provider of knowledge, a witness to the past. As I walked it’s streets with my Rolleiflex camera, I was stopped by people who were excited to see someone with a relic from a by-gone age. The importance of photography is recognised in Paris and contributes to its intellectual life. I am a camera, better still I am a Rolleiflex camera.
© John Minihan 2010
I would like to thank Parisbynumbers for supporting my work.

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MONTPAR07 – rue Daguerre, 75014 Paris

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Guest Comments

I rented an apartment for three months on Daguerre street in Montparnasse. Wonderful! This would be the best word to describe it.

Very well localized, close to everything: supermarket, bakery, dairy, flower shop, wine shop, bistros, chocolate shops, stores, laundries, bookshops and pretty much everything you’d probably need is nearby. The Denfert-Rochereau metro station is on the end of street and provides access to all parts of the city and linking directly to Charles De Gaulle Airport with a single RER B travel.

The district could not be more Parisian: a charm. Outside, the small streets with lots of trees. Shopping and entertainment just a few blocks away. Inside the apartment, all the comfort you could wish for: cleanliness, convenience, safety, heating, neat bathroom, soft beds and well equipped kitchen.

As for the service, impeccable. From your arrival to the presentation of the apartment, from the check in to the check out, you can always count with them. I had no problems while negotiating or paying for the apartment from Brazil. I recommend it and will use their services on my next trip for sure.

My stay in Paris was wonderful, mainly because I’ve chosen SCI. Was a wonderful time to never forget!

Posted by: Wania Victoria | 14 February 2011 at 01:51

Overall, it was almost perfect. The neighborhood was wonderful–the apartment is on a small street with dozens of bakeries, cafes, grocery stores, etc and 7 mins from the Metro. It was quiet, clean, and well-furnished. The internet worked well, though occasionally disconnected. For some reason these really tiny bugs (almost like gnats) would sometimes wind up on the shower floor.

Posted by: David Epstein | 16 June 2010 at 23:27

Dear Liam. Just to say many thanks I had a marvellous time in Paris, MONTPAR07  was wonderful and could not have been better located. The Rue Daguerre was just round the corner from the Cemetery Montparnasse where Samuel Beckett is buried among many others. I often had Dinner in  “Au Vin des Rues” round the corner from the apartment where the Photographer Robert Doisneau who took that famous Photograph of the ‘KISS’ lived and had lunch every day.

Warm Regards. John.

Posted by: John Minihan | 31 May 2010 at 14:50

A pleasant apartment that is well-located; on a street with lots of interesting shops and restaurants and close to Denfert Rochereau on the RER line. Dealing with this agency is convenient, especially for someone from outside the Euro zone and from outside Paris. No deposits in Euros are expected so there are no unnecessary costs related to currency conversion and they will meet you at the apartment. The one point to note is that they are often not punctual for the appointment and you may have to wait for about half an hour on the street when you first arrive.

Posted by: Gopalan Nadathur | 27 November 2009 at 16:04

I stayed in this apartment a month. The apartment was fantastic with numerous grocery stores and shops right at your doorstep! It was a perfect place to stay and enjoy the sites of Paris.

Enjoy!

T. Beckman
Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Posted by: Trevor Beckman | 09 November 2009 at 20:23