The surest way to my heart is through a
flea market. So St-Remy and I are sure
to become very good friends.
What a seriously beautiful town. Not a lick
of lavender to be had anywhere in bloody Provence (seems the shitty spring
weather wasn’t just restricted to London…) but there are poppies and
wildflowers everywhere and in St-Remy, even without the constant sunshine (see
previous point about shitty springs) there’s a lot to love, not least the fact
that I see Van Gogh paintings in every field. But I'll get to that…
So we arrived Saturday afternoon,
exchanging florid nods and enthusiastic, gesticulating limbs in lieu of even
the most basic of French with the housekeeper who let us in to our
accommodation for the week. And once we had the keys and a basic lay of the
land we were into the town for groceries and a poke about.
St-Remy is
well-known in Provence, a thriving hub of boucheries, boulangeries, antique
shops and all manner of posh tourist tat, but it also has the distinction of
being not only the birthplace of Nostradamus but also the town where Van Gogh
convalesced for a year in 1899. St-Remy is the town in his iconic Starry Night painting. We’re planning to visit the asylum where he
stayed later this week, which I’m really looking forward to, but in the
meantime there’s the rest of Provence to be getting on with.
My own, accidental, starry night (trying to photograph the full moon...) |
Yesterday St-Remy offered up not only a
flea market (my suitcase now considerably heavier with the procurement of a
totally awesome glass vase that was, in another life, an old lamp base) but a
parade in honour of well-I’m-not-sure-what but there were horses and people in
costume and lots of flowers so I was happily enough distracted.
And then, having dropped off the vase (and maybe
also a pair of earrings…) at home, we spent the afternoon exploring Les Baux,
the first of a handful of medieval Provencal villages on picturesque
hills.
The actual village of Les Baux itself was hilly and quaint, though heaving with
fellow tourists, but if I'm honest, I didn’t have much time for its historical ruins.
You know, you say ruins, I say rubble. What can I tell you? I’m a modern
history girl.
Les Baux |
The view from the rubble, I mean, ruins |
What was
truly spectacular however was the visit to nearby Carrieres de Lumieres, a former
quarry where Bauxite was first discovered and where, in 1959, Jean Cocteau
filmed The Testament of Orpheus. Since
then it’s been used as a jaw-droppingly spectacular setting for a cultural
programme of immersive multimedia displays.
Inside Carrieres de Lumieres |
When
we were there it was an exhibition of Impressionist artists whose work and
practice had been informed and inspired by time spent in the south of France.
With an emotive soundtrack, these vibrant, beautiful works merged one into
the next, scaling these huge rock walls and wandering around in this cool,
otherwise dark space, it was like walking almost literally through these
paintings. It was nothing short of fucking stunning.
Today was Mum’s day (we’ve each been given
a day for the planning) and she was keen on driving through the Luberon, an
expansive national park full of quaint, cobblestoned villages in earthy Provencal hues. In the course of the day we strolled through Loumarin, lunched in Bonnieux with
its killer views, bought booze in pretty Menerbe and got windswept in Gordes.
The view out over Bonnieux |
Picturesque Gordes |
Menerbe |
It’s been a good couple of days. Good food, great
wine, brilliant company and pretty to the point of cliché. The rest of the week looks promising.
* I can't quite believe I've now written 200** posts (OK, fine 199 and one pesky draft about my trip to LA last year that I never got around to finishing thanks to The Book...) I also can't quite believe that September will mark five years in London. How the fuck did that happen? It's staggering to think how much I've grown, learned, seen, done, accomplished since then. Here's to the next 200 posts. Hope they're interesting.
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