Artist’s retreat Where: Hydra, Greece Who: Leonard Cohen
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Where: Charleston, Sussex Who: Bloomsbury Set
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Slow living is the name of the game on this sun-and-star-soaked isle. Cars, scooters and buses are an absolute no-go: a troop of port-side donkeys await the bag-laden visitor. A fan of Hydra’s let’s-do-somethingby-doing-nothing attitude, Leonard Cohen spent many a beach-bronzed year d ia Chou hury kicking about the island. Leonard die- Soph / hard? It’s no chore to follow in the am r singer/songwriter’s footsteps – many happy hours can be spent hiking the island (which clocks in at a wee 50km squared) in search of a rocky beach or a cool pew of one of Hydra’s stone monasteries. And in the evening? Sip on some chilled Ouzo, pick at a bowl of olives and keep an eye out for the ghost of Cohen – last seen singing with the donkeys...
Virginia Woolf, Vanessa Bell, Duncan Grant: during the second world war years, the infamous clique retreated to the sisters’ sussex farmhouse. It wasn’t anything luxurious – winters were notoriously icey, and there was no hot water to thaw sketching/writing fingers – but the creative crew proceeded to transform their new home into a painted wonderland. Walls were covered top to bottom with painted murals, furniture covered in velvet and roses trained to climb the garden trellis: it’s all pretty fabulous. Today, Charleston is open to visitors and hosts an annual Literary Festival – it’s surely the dream destination for any budding Bloomsbury enthusiasts.
Sketch / sharpner : Epigram / Daisy Game
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Daisy Game tours some of the world’s most creative destinations
Where: Aix En Provence Who: Paul Cezanne Epigra m
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French houses: father of post-impressionist painting (...discuss) Paul Cezanne found inspiration in his home town of Aix. You can visit the ‘atelier de Cezanne’ – where the painter worked from 1902 until his death four years later – and play an immersive game of spot the difference: lavender, crickets, shaded coffee tables, cobbled streets, warm red wine – if you e
Where: City Lights Bookstore and Publishers, San Francisco Who: Alan Ginsberg
can see it, Cezanne probably painted it.
Where: Shakespeare and Company, Paris Who: everyone!
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Whilst the Beat writers found their footing in Greenwich Village, NYC, this bunch of disenfranchised youths (Diana Di Prima, Alan Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, etc) also spent time in the land of ‘no cultural advantage’(!), kicking the sidewalks of Los Angeles and San Francisco. A little grungy and anti-establishment-y, SF’s City Lights was an early Ginsberg backer – stepping in to publish the poet’s now-considered-seminal work, Howl. Today, the bookstore is still swaying to the rhythm of the written word, inviting visitors to indulge in both its history with the Beats and its present as a still-up-andrunning seller. Calling all ‘angelheaded hipsters’ out there – this is the one for you.
Established in 1920 by one Sylvia Beach, Shakespeare and Company might just be The Ultimate in creatively focused retreats. Acting as a kind of unofficial ‘salon’ through the 20s and 30s, Beach’s store hosted the likes of Ernest Hemingway, Ezra Pound and James Joyce (yes, really!) The spirit of Beach’s hospitality lives on through (now its second, relocated guise) Shakespeare and Co’s Tumbleweed Programme: in exchange for a few hours work in the shop, aspiring writers are welcome to tuck themselves into bedsamongst-the-bookshelves and sleep in the shop free of charge. To think that a place like this exists is – in my humble and forever bookish opinion – proof of magic in the world.
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Rebecca Pardon