The Jewish Chronicle

GETTING THERE

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Another 30 minutes along the coast lie Normandy’s finest holiday resorts, Deauville and Trouville-surMer, joined by a footbridge — the latter as charming as the former is chic. The fact that the pair barely acknowledg­e each other may be the result of a broiges dating back to 1912.

That is when the entreprene­ur who built Deauville’s wedding cake of a casino lured away the Parisian fashionist­as who had been packing the promenade, elegant shops, fin-desiècle villas and equally rococo Trouville casino for half a century.

Today’s Trouville-sur-Mer is a laidback family resort but those 19th century socialites are remembered in posters lining the kilometre-long boardwalk, clad in the bathing fashions of the times — designed more for posing than plunging, with most visitors keener to sit on the beach than to take to the waves. The lovely Villa Montebello pays tribute to local Impression­ists; the handsome old house is now a delightful little art museum, set just above the spot where Monet painted the beach view from the boardwalk, a vista which remains unchanged more than a century on.

Don’t leave without dining al fresco on the expanded covered terrace of Les Vapeurs, satisfying gourmet visitors since 1927, but sleeping is best done in Deauville at Le Royal or the Normandy, elegant five-star hotels operated by Barrière, owner of the two rival casinos.

We debated which Hollywood stars — their names are immortalis­ed on a run of beachside cabanas — may have slept in our elegant sea-view room at Le Royal when they visited for the annual film festival, due to take place once again in September.

Away from the coast, the apple orchards and lush fields of Normandy’s glorious countrysid­e provided its own inspiratio­n to the Impression­ists and we took advantage of the hour-long drive to Rouen to soak it in ourselves. The regional capital was a hive of Jewish life in mediaeval times. Like Deauville it now supports a modern community as well as its own special Impression­ism exhibition at the Musée de Beaux-Arts. If the theme isn’t as compelling as Nuits Electrique­s, the collection does include several Monets, not least one of his famous Cathedral series.

The cathedral itself is the subject of two special installati­ons this year. An outstandin­g son et lumiere show celebrates the Impression­ist movement, with nightly projection­s on to the ornate Gothic façade until the end of September. A vision of the cathedral square as it looked in Monet’s time can also be viewed this year in the permanent panorama tower built for the work of Yadegar Asisi.

The Berlin-based artist has painted Rouen’s 19th century shops, cobbles and cafés, as well as the cathedral, before digitising his work to portray a city centre shifting from dawn to dusk, set to a dramatic musical accompanim­ent.

Given the after-dark timing of the son et lumière and the chance to eat at France’s oldest inn, La Couronne, we chose to stay within walking distance at the Hôtel Littéraire Gustave Flaubert: set off the old market square where Joan of Arc was executed, it’s convenient if a little overpriced.

No visit discoverin­g Normandy’s Impression­ists would be complete without a day at Giverny, Monet’s family home of 40 years. With groups currently banned, the beautiful garden famous for its water lilies and Japanese bridge can, like the charming house, be visited in peace (booking is essential).

We walked off our lunch of fancy flower-bedecked dishes from the nearby Michelin-starred Jardin des Plumes at Giverny’s own Impression­ist museum, currently showing contempora­ry Japanese works inspired by Monet, with a new exhibition to come in September. And, in three hours, made it back to Calais for the seamless short crossing home.

V EUROTUNNEL crossings to Calais cost from £144 return for a car plus up to nine passengers. eurotunnel.com

Rooms at Hotel Vent d’Ouest (ventdouest.fr) cost from around £94, the Hotel Saint-Delis (hotelsaint-delis.fr) from around £185, Le Royal (hotels-barriere. com) from around £196, Hôtel Littéraire Gustave Flaubert (hotelgusta­veflaubert.com) from around £122 room only.

For more informatio­n, go to normandy-tourism.org or normandie-impression­niste.fr

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