This is Marseille's big show of the late winter / early spring - in fact it's the city's most ambitious show of the year. Visages: Picasso, Magritte, Warhol... (Faces: Picasso, Magritte, Warhol...) traces the representation of the human face in art from the early 20th century to the present day through 150 works by 97 leading artists, also including Munch, Grosz, Giacometti, Bonnard and Bacon. The show opens tomorrow (21 February), but we got a preview yesterday at the press show and here's our report: click here to read more
A Taste of Provence
Lavender fields, hilltop villages and spectacular rocky fjords, rosé wine and bouillabaisse, Cézanne and Van Gogh, cutting edge rap and hip-hop music, Jean de Florette and Manon des Sources, pétanque, scuba diving and Olympique de Marseille: Provence is a vibrant mix of romantic tradition and surprising, fast-changing modernity. This is an insider's guide to the best of it, from a professional journalist living there.
Thursday, February 20, 2014
The Changing Faces of Modern Art
This is Marseille's big show of the late winter / early spring - in fact it's the city's most ambitious show of the year. Visages: Picasso, Magritte, Warhol... (Faces: Picasso, Magritte, Warhol...) traces the representation of the human face in art from the early 20th century to the present day through 150 works by 97 leading artists, also including Munch, Grosz, Giacometti, Bonnard and Bacon. The show opens tomorrow (21 February), but we got a preview yesterday at the press show and here's our report: click here to read more
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
The Man From Michelin, He Say Yes
It's that time of year again! In February Michelin publishes the new editions of its influential guides, both touristic and gastronomic. First up is tourism (the restaurant guide follows later this month) - and it seems as though all those renovations and new or revamped museums in Marseille have paid off, big-time because the man from Michelin has positively showered the city with stars. Click here to read more
Sunday, February 16, 2014
Who Chooses France's Most Beautiful Villages?
I've often wondered idly who chooses France's Most Beautiful Villages, on what basis and whether villages ever get booted off the list (they do). So I found out a bit more about this typically bureaucratic system - and about the Most Beautiful Village which left the list of its own accord. Click here to read more
Saturday, February 15, 2014
Hip Hop Hooray For Dance In Avignon
The huge Avignon Theatre Festival in July isn't the only major arts event in town. Les Hivernales, as the name hints, unfolds in winter (or rather, this year, in the very early spring) and celebrates dance, and in 2014 hip hop is the star. Click here to read more
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
One of the Best Restaurants in Aix en Provence
I've been hearing really great things about Vintrépide, a new-ish restaurant in a quiet little backstreet right on the edge of the Old Town in Aix en Provence. So one mid-week lunchtime we dropped by to check it out. The verdict: while prices aren't cheap (but then that's true of pretty much any half-way decent restaurant in Aix), Vintrépide represents superlative value and is certainly one of the best spots to eat in town. Click here to read more
Saturday, February 8, 2014
World's Largest Cruise Ship To Sail to Marseille
The American cruise company Royal Caribbean has just announced that its monster cruise ship, Allure
of the Seas - which claims to be the largest in the world with
accommodation for 5400 passengers, plus another couple of thousand more crew - will be sailing to Marseille in 2015 - and, for those ultra early birds among you, booking for this floating city is already open (and you can bet the sky will be a good deal bluer on the Mediterranean than in the above photo). Click here to read more
Friday, February 7, 2014
Brangelina Strikes Gold, Again
Normal service returns here at A Taste of Provence after a brisk but fabulous two-week break in Mexico, and there's a ton of news to catch up with. First off, we learn that Miraval rosé, the celebrity wine curated by Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie at their Provence estate, has just won yet more accolades. After rave reviews for the couple's maiden, 2012 vintage, the second, 2013 wine - which goes on sale this week - has been acclaimed in equally glowing terms ("charmingly pretty"... "a mouthwatering finish") in Decanter magazine. Click here to read more
Sunday, January 19, 2014
Discover Pagnol in the Hills of Aubagne
Each year, just outside Marseille, a group of actors offers a season
of all-day hikes combined with theatrical performances. These are a really brilliant experience. As you hike through the craggy hills of Aubagne and Allauch, you watch (and play an extra in) a show dramatising Marcel
Pagnol's work in the very landscapes where it's set. Previous plays have told the celebrated story of Manon des Sources or been based on the charming comedy The Baker's Wife. This year there's a new
spectacle inspired by Pagnol's 1938 satire, Le Schpountz, about a naive
bumpkin who fantasises about becoming a movie star (it originally starred the popular local actor Fernandel, seen on the pster above). Click here to read more
Saturday, January 18, 2014
Memories of the First World War in Provence
The centenary of the beginning of the First World War will be
marked in many ways across Europe, and one of the first examples is in
Avignon, which is staging an exhibition of the drawings of the Belgian
symbolist artist Henry de Groux. Born in 1866, de Groux would have been too old to fight in the
war, but he spent time at the front in the Marne and hauntingly captured
the horrors he saw there. Around 40 of his powerful pieces are on display in the foyer of the Hôtel de Ville (Town Hall) from 7 February to 9 March. Pictured above: L'Assaut, Verdun. And there's plenty more to come in the course of the year. Click here to read more
Friday, January 17, 2014
A New Comic-Strip Tramway For Aubagne
How do you fancy these chaps and chapettes as fellow commuters? When the town of Aubagne, just outside Marseille, decided to install a new tramway system, it also commissioned a leading artist to design it. The choice fell on Hervé Di Rosa, who hails from Sète, just along the coast. Di Rosa is a leading practitioner of bandes dessinées (graphic novels) and one of his most popular characters, the jolly one-eyed René, inspired these designs. Click here to read more
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