βLunch could last all day β and nightβ: inside Coco Chanelβs sun-kissed sanctum for artβs superstars
The French fashion designerβs lavish Mediterranean villa was frequented by everyone from DalΓ to Garbo to Stravinsky to Churchill. It has now been lovingly restored β with a thrillingly bolstered library
It is the place where Salvador DalΓ painted The Enigma of Hitler, a haunting landscape featuring a giant telephone receiver that seems to be crying a tear over a cutout picture of the Fuhrer. Conceived in 1939, the work seems to anticipate war. It is also the place where Winston Churchill penned parts of his multi-volume A History of the English-Speaking Peoples, and painted its dappled-light view. Somerset Maugham would visit, too, as well as novelist Colette, composer Igor Stravinsky and playwright Jean Cocteau, partaking in lunches that lasted all day and night, with debates and discussions around artistic ideas.
This place is La Pausa: the Mediterranean villa in the hills of Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, once owned by husband-and-wife writing duo Charles Norris Williamson and Alice Muriel Williamson, followed by French fashion designer Gabrielle βCocoβ Chanel, who had it rebuilt from scratch at the end of the 1920s. She later sold it to an American publishing couple, Emery and Wendy Reves.
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Β© Photograph: Roger Schall Β© Schall Collection

Β© Photograph: Roger Schall Β© Schall Collection

Β© Photograph: Roger Schall Β© Schall Collection