Tags
Antiques, Château Gabriel, French curiosities, French design, Jacques Grange, Marcel Proust, Monet's Water Lilies, Pierre Berge, Yves Saint Laurent
The stunning collaboration between Jacques Grange, Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Bergé
on the Normandy manor Château Gabriel was inspired by Marcel Proust’s
À la Recherche du Temps Perdu. Marcel, who spent the summers in nearby
Cabourg, is said to have visited the house…
Throughout the ground floor reception rooms, the walls are covered
by murals created by Paul Meriguet in homage to Monet’s Water Lilies…
Madeleine Castaing chair covered in pale pink velvet sprinkled with flowers,
“…reminiscent of buxom ballerinas in fringed tutus.”
The opulent overabundance of the Napoleon III period almost overwhelms the eye in the
grande salon. Grange calls it ” a blend of a Visconti film and the style Rothschild”
A photograph of Marcel Proust amidst an arrangement of Minton porcelain
and a vintage Baccarat crystal box. Saint Laurent named each of the nine bedrooms
for characters in Proust’s novel. His own named after the cultivated and sensitive
Charles Swann…the pseudonym that the couturier used when he traveled incognito.
The black and beige marble floors extend from the main dining room into the smaller one…
French 19th century neo-gothic chairs surround an English mahogany table…
Lit by 19th century antique chandelier, 18th century Strasbourg cabbage…
Continuing the conversation of Little Augury here and bolstering my claim that the US cover of
The Private World of Yves Saint Laurent & Pierre Berg is more representative of the interiors…
and therefore better than the French cover…visit her and cast your vote…
All photos (except book): House and Garden December 2005
I absolutely love both dining rooms. I feel so attached to those black and white floors. YSL had such a way with color and the rich hues of the interiors play so well against the black and white flooring. ~Jermaine~
Hello,
read the book already at a good friends place when we came back from the Yves Saint Laurent Pierre Berge auction in Paris and it’s true chateau gabriel is a fantastic place 🙂
thanks for sharing.
David