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Villa Noailles

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Town or city
  
Completed
  
1928 (1928)

Owner
  
Commune of Hyères

Phone
  
+33 4 98 08 01 98

Construction started
  
1923

Country
  
Renovated
  
1991; 1997

Opened
  
1928

Architectural style
  
International Style

Villa Noailles

Client
  
Marie-Laure and Charles de Noailles

Address
  
Montée de Noailles, 83400 Hyères, France

Hours
  
Closed today MondayClosedTuesdayClosedWednesday1–6PMThursday1–6PMFriday3–8PMSaturday1–6PMSunday1–6PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Chapelle Saint‑Blaise d'Hyères, Parc Olbius Riquier, Kiddy Parc, Villa Cavrois, Porquerolles

Des racines et des ailes la villa noailles


Villa Noailles ([vi.la no.aj]) is an early modernist house, built by architect Robert Mallet-Stevens for art patrons Charles and Marie-Laure de Noailles, between 1923 and 1927. It is located in the hills above Hyères, in the Var, southeastern France.

Contents

Villa noailles 1929


History

Charles de Noailles was born in 1891, his wife Marie-Laure in 1902. They were married in 1923. Before their marriage, they became friends of artist-filmmaker Jean Cocteau, and Noailles commissioned a portrait of his wife by Pablo Picasso in 1923.

In 1923, they signed a contract with the architect Robert Mallet-Stevens to build a summer villa in the hills above the city of Hyères. Construction took three years, and eventually also included a triangular Cubist garden designed by Gabriel Guevrekian.

Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, the couple were important patrons of modern art, particularly surrealism; they supported film projects by Man Ray, Salvador Dalí, and Luis Buñuel; and commissioned paintings, photographs and sculptures by Balthus, Giacometti, Constantin Brâncuși, Miró, and Dora Maar. Villa Noailles features prominently in Man Ray's film Les Mystères du Château de Dé.

In 1940 the villa was occupied by the Italian Army and turned into a hospital. From 1947 until 1970, the villa was the summer residence of Marie-Laure. She died in 1970, and the house was purchased by the city of Hyères in 1973. Charles de Noailles died in 1981.

The villa is now used as an arts center and for special exhibits.

James Lord was a guest there in the mid-fifties. In his book Picasso and Dora: a memoir he writes: "...an undistinguished cubist extravaganza of reinforced concrete set atop a high hill, within the ancient walls of a Saracen fortress. It had been designed in the late twenties by a fashionable architect named Mallet-Stevens, contained something like fifty rooms and was surrounded by a large garden." He recalls the room, where Marie-Laure tried to seduce him: "...a large salon at Saint-Bernard which had no windows but was lighted from above by a bizarre cubist skylight which occupied almost all the ceiling, adding to the sense of existing outside time in a stranded ocean liner." The beauty of the location did not help, however, the "redoutable viscountess" in conquering his chastity.

References

Villa Noailles Wikipedia