Daily Mail

SWISS SENSATION!

Dreamy scenery, inspiring art and lashings of hot chocolate make for a tasty trip

- by Laura Freeman

ALBerTO Giacometti was a mountain goat. As a boy he disappeare­d into the meadows above the village of Stampa in Bregaglia near the Swiss-Italian border. When the sun was high he daydreamed in a cave in the hillside. A farmer tried to employ him in the fields but the future painter and sculptor just gazed at the sky.

No wonder when the air is so clear, the sky so improbably blue, the peaks white with snow as late as May.

Arrive in Stampa and you straight away want to be sketching, taking photograph­s, lacing your walking boots.

And with a major new retrospect­ive of the artist at Tate Modern in London, there’s no better time to follow in his footsteps.

As a young man, holidaying with his family by the lake at nearby Maloja, Giacometti went hiking with his brother Diego up mountain passes and across glaciers. Both wore three-piece tweed suits.

Like any goat, Alberto was stubborn, determined. While making his name as an artist in Geneva, Paris and New York, he worked with ferocious concentrat­ion, smoking all the time.

One patron said that sitting for a portrait by him was like having your skin pulled back from its skull, such was the intensity of his focus.

He stretched the human body to its limit with thin, tense figures reduced to the sparest skeletons. They are haunting presences in the galleries of Zurich’s Kunsthaus gallery — the place to start for Giacometti pilgrims, with its survey of the artist’s life and work.

Here you see his early portrait heads, inspired by Picasso’s Cubism; his gaunt sculpture The Walking Man (1947); and a pensive sketch of his mother Annetta (1951).

Giacometti once presented her with three versions of a painted vase of flowers, some coloured, some monochrome. She picked the grey one, because she said: ‘What do you know about colour?’

The Marktgasse Hotel is minutes from the Grossmünst­er cathedral with its stained glass windows by Sigmar Polke and Augusto Giacometti, Alberto’s cousin.

There are more Augusto windows in the Fraumunste­r church over the Munsterbru­cke bridge and a dreamy, visionary rose window by Chagall.

Do not expect to come home slender as a Giacometti bronze. The shops in Zurich sell either Chanel or chocolate. Teuscher is the prettiest, with pralines in brightly coloured foils. H. Schwarzenb­ach is the most venerable, more like an apothecary than a sweetshop. Coffees and hot chocolates at Café Schober will set you up for sightseein­g. Bregaglia, three hours by train, is chestnut country. At Longhin in Maloja they serve chestnutfl­our pasta with local mushrooms, then hot chestnuts with crema di marroni, and glasses of chestnut schnapps. On the hairpin bends between Maloja, Borgonovo, where Alberto was born in 1901 and buried in 1966, and Stampa where the studio he inherited from his painter father Giovanni has been impeccably restored, you see the slatted huts for the chestnut harvest. The Stampa studio ( ciaesa

granda.ch) brings Giacometti to life: his boyhood graffiti on the walls, his doodles on the backs of doors, the match burns on the floor below his easel.

Stay in nearby Soglio, high above the hairpins, with not a sound to wake you in the night except the occasional goat bell.

Dr Marco Giacometti of the Centro Giacometti is a spellbindi­ng guide to these villages. (Tours: fondazione@centrogiac­ometti.ch).

He is a cousin to the GiovanniAl­berto-Diego branch of the family and has the lean, rangy body of one of Alberto’s plaster casts. The likeness is uncanny. ‘I have a mission,’ he says as he walks us through meadows to Giacometti’s daydreamin­g cave. He wants to make others fall in love with the mountains that inspired and drew the artist back from childhood until his death at 65. even in hospital he was still calling for ‘ plastilina’ — his modelling clay.

TRAVEL FACTS

Easyjet ( easyjet.com, 0330 365 5000) from Luton to Zurich from £60 return. Doubles at the Marktgasse Hotel ( marktgasse­hotel.ch, 0041 44 266 1010) from £200 per night. More at myswitzerl­and.com. Alberto Giacometti is at Tate Modern from May 10 to September 10 2017, tickets £16.80 ( tate.org.uk).

 ??  ?? Masterpiec­e: Soglio and the mountains that entranced sculptor Giacometti
Masterpiec­e: Soglio and the mountains that entranced sculptor Giacometti

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