WWD Digital Daily

Charlotte Gainsbourg Turns Father’s House Into a Museum

For the first time, visitors will be allowed into the Paris home of Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin.

- BY JOELLE DIDERICH

PARIS — Ever since Serge Gainsbourg's death in 1991, fans have flocked to his house in Paris, plastering the walls with scrawled tributes. Now his daughter Charlotte Gainsbourg is opening the doors of the residence to the public, as part of a cultural institutio­n that includes a museum, café and concept store.

Starting Sept. 20, visitors will be allowed into the 1,400-square-foot maisonette, which the actress and singer has preserved as a kind of mausoleum for her father, a seminal force in French culture best known for his erotic 1969 duet with her mother Jane Birkin, on “Je t'aime…moi non plus,” a song banned in several countries due to its overtly sexual content.

When she inherited her childhood home at age 19, Gainsbourg would go there to mourn her father privately, since his grave at the Montparnas­se cemetery was always mobbed with fans.

“I didn't want to touch anything. My goal was to keep everything frozen,” she told reporters on Wednesday at the Gainsbarre café, which turns into a piano bar at night. “Everyone naturally wanted a piece of my father, and I had to deal with that, but at least I had this door that I could close. Everything stood still, as if he were about to come back.”

Packed to the gills with objects and memorabili­a, the house provides an extraordin­arily intimate glimpse into the private life of the French singersong­writer, actor, composer and director, who penned songs for everyone from Brigitte Bardot to Catherine Deneuve. The sofa still bears the mark of where he sat, while an ashtray overflows with the butts of his Gitanes cigarettes.

Still, it took Charlotte Gainsbourg more than three decades to turn her vision of a Gainsbourg museum into reality. At one point, she fantasized about opening a themed hotel around the house. At others, she was tempted to throw in the towel, defeated by the technical challenges of welcoming visitors to the cramped space.

In 2008, French luxury magnate François-Henri Pinault offered to help, introducin­g her to architect Jean Nouvel, who proposed an audacious concept that would have showcased the rooms in glass boxes. But with a film, an exhibition and a book about her father released in rapid succession, Gainsbourg felt overwhelme­d by the weight of her heritage and stalled.

Eventually, she could no longer stand to see the place abandoned, and the current project took shape. Maison Gainsbourg is operated by Arteum, an entity that specialize­s in museum gift shops, while the bar is managed by Paris Society, the hospitalit­y group behind Paris restaurant­s Girafe, Bonnie and Monsieur Bleu.

Famed interior designer Jacques Garcia conceived the modern annex, which can be visited jointly with the house or separately. When the first batch of tickets for the house went on sale in April, they sold out within seven hours. Slots are fully booked until the end of the year, with additional tickets to be released periodical­ly.

With its walls clad in black canvas and its vast collection of esoteric objects, the interior of 5 bis, Rue de Verneuil was amply documented during Gainsbourg's lifetime. From his Steinway grand piano in the living room to his library and closet, everything is intact (there's even a packet of Yes sponge cakes, since discontinu­ed, in the glass-doored fridge.)

“We stuck to a road map, and fans or visitors who are particular­ly attentive will, I hope, find things where they belong,” said Anatole Maggiar, director of content and programmin­g of Maison Gainsbourg.

During an inventory of the house's contents, he catalogued 25,000 documents and objects, of which 450 are displayed in the museum located at 14 Rue de Verneuil, whose design mirrors that of the house. “I felt a little bit like Howard Carter discoverin­g Tutankhamu­n's tomb,” Maggiar recalled.

Only 10 people are allowed inside the house at any one time, making it a privileged moment — and one that visitors are asked not to record. They're guided by an audio experience, designed by Soundwalk Collective, that mixes Charlotte Gainsbourg's reminiscen­ces with vintage snippets of everyday life in the Gainsbourg­Birkin household.

It makes for a poignant experience. In the bedroom, visitors hear her account of how she lay down alongside her father, who had passed away in his sleep, with her sister Kate Barry and his last partner Caroline von Paulus, better known as Bambou, as fans sang in the street outside. “Time stood still for what felt like days,” she can be heard saying.

Gainsbourg presented a documentar­y about her mother at last year's Cannes Film Festival, but has rarely discussed her father, with whom she recorded the controvers­ial song “Lemon Incest” when she was only 12.

“We waited for 32 years, but the floodgates really opened. It's amazing what she managed to share. It's not easy for her,” said Sébastien Merlet, the scientific curator of Maison Gainsbourg and author of “Le Gainsbook: In the Studio With Serge Gainsbourg.”

Charlotte Gainsbourg herself sees it slightly differentl­y. As the daughter of two national institutio­ns, she's used to living her life under a microscope. “I've always been both extremely private, which my father was too, and extremely shameless, which my father was equally,” she said with a laugh.

“I don't feel particular­ly like an exhibition­ist and at the same time, I'm putting people in the position of being voyeurs and I'm aware of that, but it doesn't bother me at all, actually. I also have my share of secrets. Of course, there are things that I don't talk about. It's not like I'm an open book,” she added.

The actress, who has pushed boundaries herself with films like “Antichrist” and “Nymphomani­ac,” embraces the edgier side of her father, who in his later years was overshadow­ed by his drunken alterego Gainsbarre, who once set fire to a 500-franc note to protest against high taxes, and lewdly propositio­ned Whitney Houston on French TV.

“It's not up to me to judge him. I have my memories, I have my own take on what he left me that I want to keep intact,” she explained, adding that she's always had to address questions about “Lemon Incest,” which she firmly describes as a product of her father's imaginatio­n.

“He liked to provoke people and court scandal. It's part of who he was and I really respect that. At a time when personal expression is being curtailed, fortunatel­y there were people like him, even if people find it offensive today,” she added.

One aspect of Serge Gainsbourg's heritage that everyone can agree on is his enduring style influence. His dandyish wardrobe, in fact, consisted of a handful of shirts, jackets and jeans, four T-shirts and four pairs of his signature white Repetto loafers, always worn without socks — even on a ski holiday.

“People are always talking about his Pygmalion relationsh­ip with Jane Birkin, as if he had created her, but in exchange for the songs he wrote for her and that she performed brilliantl­y, she played a crucial role in shaping his style, because she arrived straight from Swinging London in the ‘60s,” said Maggiar.

It was Birkin who encouraged Gainsbourg to grow a three-day beard, unbutton his shirts and wear jewelry, he noted.

In the gift shop, visitors can buy a copy of his frayed Lee Cooper jeans, wraparound Pierre Marly shades, Zizi Oxford shoes and even a limited-edition Saint Laurentdes­igned replica of his favorite pin-striped women's jacket, bought at London's Portobello market for 2 pounds.

A style muse herself, Charlotte Gainsbourg enjoys a close relationsh­ip with Saint Laurent creative director Anthony Vaccarello, and the luxury brand, owned by Pinault's Kering group, is the official partner of the museum, which expects to welcome 100,000 visitors a year. “We couldn't have done it without them,” she said.

Having lost her mother in July, she briefly considered delaying the opening but finally decided to forge ahead. Her husband, director Yvan Attal, and their children were among the first visitors. “People find it really moving, but I'm still surprised by the reactions and I've found it very soothing,” she said.

She's already thinking about what comes next once the initial flood of fans has subsided. “We'll have to keep the place alive for future generation­s,” she mused. “It's quite exciting to think that yes, I'm turning a page, but it's not completely over. Perhaps there is more still to do.”

 ?? ?? The French musician Serge Gainsbourg with the actress Jane Birkin in their Paris home.
The French musician Serge Gainsbourg with the actress Jane Birkin in their Paris home.
 ?? ?? Charlotte Gainsbourg in her father's former home in Paris.
Charlotte Gainsbourg in her father's former home in Paris.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States