French Fresco Collection is live!
I am so excited to finally share my French Fresco Collection! In it you’ll find original watercolors, prints, notecards and gift tags, all inspired by the French Riviera.
I created these illustrations during my recent three-week stay in Villefranche-Sur-Mer, near Nice. I spent my days visiting places like the famous Villa Ephrussi de Rothschild in Cap Ferret (HERE) and the Prince’s Palace in Monaco, home to Princess Grace (HERE). I snapped endless photos of the beautiful frescoes on the walls and doors. And then, in the evenings, back at my apartment in Villefranche-Sur-Mer, I stayed up late watercoloring what I’d seen. It dawned on me how beautiful they’d be as stationery and prints. And my French Fresco Collection was born!
The French Fresco Collection includes six motifs. Each is available on notecards, prints (5×7″, 8×10″ and 11×14″) and gift tags!
You can browse the entire collection and shop the originals on my web site HERE! In the meantime, I’ve gathered a few shots of the inspiration behind these pieces as well as the works in-progress below!
These two frescoes (above and below)) are located in the Blue Bedroom in the Villa Ephrussi de Rothschild, the villa’s most elaborate guest bedroom. The Villa Ephrussi de Rothschild is an Italian Renaissance-style home that was built for the Baroness Beatrice de Rothschild between 1905 and 1912.
Beatrice’s bedroom (below) is furnished with a Venetian bed covered with Chinese silk embroidered with various flower and bird motifs that complement this beautiful swan fresco on a nearby door panel.
I loved these two frescoes in the villa (below) and decided to paint them after I returned to Dallas! The blue hue is so beautiful and they remind me of intaglios.
I came across this fresco (below) at the Prince’s Palace of Monaco. There are many more beautiful frescoes in the palace and I can’t wait to watercolor them all as I continue adding to my French Fresco Collection. The palace is currently undergoing major restorations of its original frescoes, one of the biggest fresco restoration projects in European history.
The Prince’s Palace of Monaco
The Prince’s Palace in Monaco was a bit overwhelming emotionally (lol) as I have seen so many photos over the years of the wedding of Princess Grace and Prince Rainier. I had no idea we’d have access to the location where they had their wedding photos taken! Swoon. Look at all the lovely details in the ceiling and floor on the balcony (scroll below), and not much has changed since their wedding day in 1956!
It was magical thinking of Grace at the palace and all the history within those rooms. These steps (below) are right below the balcony where the wedding photos were taken! The black-and-white photo of Grace is from the day she first met Rainier when she was visiting the French Riviera for the Cannes Film Festival. It’s a fabulous story involving Olivia de Havilland, whose husband was editor of Paris Match and recommended Grace and Rainier meet for a photo opportunity. The color photo is from after Grace and Rainier were married and has always been one of my favorites.
This (below) is the moment Grace and Rainier met and the space where it happened! It’s really a fun story (more than I can detail here) so I highly recommend reading about it! I believe Grace made a makeshift “hat” out of flowers because she learned at the last minute she needed a head covering of some sort to meet the prince. The room (just inside the balcony) is gorgeous and is where the prince welcomed all of his important visitors.
This is the throne room (below), where Grace and Rainier had their civil wedding ceremony! Look at that ceiling … Apparently, in 2014, restoration experts noticed older motifs beneath the layers of crumbling paint, painted directly onto the wall. Prince Albert II ordered closer investigations and other traces of old frescoes were uncovered in other rooms, covering a total of 600 m2. They have been restoring all the old frescoes. It’s an 8-year project and is considered one of the biggest painting restoration and conservation projects ever undertaken in Europe.
The palace has a large Mirror Gallery, an imitation of Versailles, which gives access to the state apartments. It is lined with marble busts, including a beautiful one of Grace.
I also thought this space (below) was so charming. Pattern on pattern! It’s the Chambre Valentinois. There’s a photo of Grace in the corner from her first visit. The walls and fabrics are to die for though they have changed since her photo I was taken in the 1950s. The ceiling is just incredible too! The painting to the right of the daybed is attributed to Bartolomeo Schedoni.
Villa Ephrussi de Rothschild
A few highlights from my visit to The Villa and Gardens Ephrussi de Rothschild. Neither photos nor words do this place justice. I stayed from open until close. Wandered the interiors and gardens, took countless photos for inspiration, sat and painted the façade and had lunch on the terrace. Simply remarkable what Béatrice Ephrussi de Rothschild created here so many years ago that we all can still enjoy today.
It was designed by the French architect Aaron Messiah and built between 1907 and 1912. The villa itself has been classified as a “monument historique.” The garden (visible below in the photo I took from the upper level loggia) was conceived in the form of a ship, to be viewed from the loggia, which is like the bridge of a vessel with the sea visible on all sides. It was inspired by a voyage Beatrice made on the liner Île de France.