Neha Patil (Editor)

Villa La Mauresque

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Designer
  
Completion date
  
1927

Type
  
Villa

Architect
  
Villa La Mauresque wwwambcotedazurcomwpcontentuploads201503S

Similar
  
Villa La Reine Jeanne, Château de Saint‑Amé, Villa Torre Clementina, Villa Cypris, Villa Cyrnos

The villa La Mauresque is located in cap Ferrat (Alpes-Maritimes) and was remodeled in 1927 by the American architect Barry Dierks (1899-1960) to serve as the main residence of the British novelist Somerset Maugham.

Contents

Surrounded by gardens and terraces, this villa has received numerous writers and celebrities.

History

Around 1900, the former missionary and chaplain to Leopold II, King of the Belgians, Félix Charmettant (1844-1921), purchased a parcel of land (4 hectares (9.9 acres)) on the newly subdivided peninsula of cap Ferrat. Here he had a villa constructed in the Moorish style by an unknown architect.

In 1927, the author Somerset Maugham purchased the property and commissioned the young American architect Barry Dierks to eliminate the villa’s original neo-oriental elements, to classicize the façades and patio, and to modernize the layout by creating a staircase. Villa La Mauresque became Maugham’s main residence until his death in 1965.

Becoming a near-obligatory stop for the literary and Riviera society, La Mauresque, from the point of Maugham’s acquisition, received most of the celebrities who visited the Riviera: Winston Churchill, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Lord Beaverbrook and the Aga Khan mingled with such literary figures as T. S. Eliot, H. G. Wells, Rudyard Kipling, Ian Fleming, Noël Coward and even Virginia Woolf.

Maugham and his partner Gerald Haxton – who was followed by other partners after Haxton’s death in 1944 – received as well numerous artists and men from the gay community. Maugham’s last partner, Allan Searle, inherited the Maugham’s estate and the villa.

In 1967, the villa was purchased by the American, Lynn Wyatt, a prominent figure in international society. The façades and the interior layout were modified – while retaining the classic style – at this time by the French architect Marcel Guilgot.

Description

La Mauresque is arranged around a central patio, on a rectangular plan. Two superimposed galleries, including one that is arcaded and the other on the ground floor, which is glazed, surround this patio. The entry façade is marked by a columnated porte-cochere. A tower marks the southeast corner of the building.

The somber façades, which lack any ornamentation, are of plaster painted white. The roof is tiled, save for the terrace, which is cement.

The interior, on the ground floor, which was modified during the renovation of 1967, included a larger semi-circular foyer (formerly the dining room), living room, kitchen, and service rooms and staff quarters. The tower housed the library. On the first floor, which is served by an elevator, are seven bedrooms and four bathrooms as well as service rooms, laundry and linen room. A staircase leads to the terrace.

The villa La Mauresque is a private residence located at 52 boulevard du Général-de-Gaulle, Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat at “Le Sémaphore.” It has been classified with the Inventaire général du patrimoine culturel since November 2008.

The villa’s gardens were the subject of a separate classification, which occurred at the same time as that of the house.

References

Villa La Mauresque Wikipedia