The novelist and horticulturist Umberto Pasti in his sitting room in Tangier, Morocco. Photo: Will Sanders. |
Umberto Pasti's rainy season house in Tangiers. World of Interiors, photo: Christopher Simon Sykes. |
UMBERTO PASTI
People talk about his
house as if it were a mirage, a thing of perfumes and flowers and
mountain vapors, one man’s paradise. In Tangier, you mention the name
Umberto Pasti and people often say, “Have you been?” And what they’re
referring to is the house and its gardens, standing in the hills not far
from the center of the city. As we came outside one evening, the light
was going. I could hear running water and the dog leapt up, just as the
call to prayer came rolling over the secluded garden. “It used to be
very different,” Pasti said, in a near whisper. “Tangier was a small
town. It was physically very unspoiled and neglected. I arrived here by
accident: I was escaping Marrakesh and social life. It was always very
charming, this place, because you were dealing with people who are very
used to foreigners.” And this is an idea I hang on to about the life of
eccentrics in Tangier: The locals care for the comfort of strangers.
In a large old room
smelling of narcissi, Pasti sat me down and smiled through cigarette
smoke. The tables around us were filled with strange shells, bones and
Neolithic pottery. I looked around as he spoke and you could almost
breathe the beauty: a piece of an Islamic column from Spain, an Italian
Renaissance stemma, many Berber pots, pine cones and marble busts. Past a
big 17th-century German armoire was a fireplace of the same period. An
18th-century Venetian screen held back a little of the evening air,
which came, nonetheless, rosemary-scented and chilled. Painted Moroccan
chests and side tables were dotted everywhere — “I love patina,” he said
— and around the walls was a multitude of astonishing tile panels, some
from Seville and Portugal and fired 200 years before the birth of
Shakespeare. Pasti writes novels and makes gardens. He is both intensely
sociable and extremely private. Walking from room to room in his
perfect house, he seemed somewhat like a man in a fairy tale, lost in
beauty, hiding behind windows in a secret garden. But then he laughed
and puffed on his cigarette and seemed quite normal again. Pasti started
as a literary critic and then began collecting strange fragments and
rare bulbs, which he would plant in his garden in the Moroccan
countryside, and also in pots at his house in Tangier. His first novel
is the story of a botanical obsession. “I started collecting wild bulbs
more or less 15 years ago,” he said. He sometimes sleeps outside among
the plants. In some ways he considers himself to be a kind of doctor to
sick plants and sees his place in the country as a kind of botanical
hospital.
“So, this is not a retreat?”
“I go to Milan to
relax,” he said. “Life here is easy but you are always fighting against
pressures, rich foreigners behaving like pigs, and what I find sad is
that many are happy with their little drinks and their little pieces of
silver on the table. Unless one is blind, one has to suffer a little
about what is going on.” He spoke of the threat to “poor Moroccans” and
the horrible new marina being built in Tangier. He is generally appalled
by change, it seems. His whole life is about restoring and preserving
and putting together. He is an obsessive. “This is what I like about
interior decoration, the history,” he said. As we left one of the rooms,
he pointed past a dozen curiously vibrant fabrics to a wall of
grotesque photographs. “I’ve started a collection of Moroccan monsters,”
he said. The wall was covered with images of people with genetic
abnormalities. “You think I’m mad?” he asked, his bright eyes chuckling.
He twisted the stem of his glasses and then let them bounce on his
hand-printed Indian shirt.
Interview sourced from
4 comments:
What a beautiful home,and what an interesting person who lives in it!
I absolutely love this article Gabi - I love when you write more in depth pieces.
His home is exquisite - just what I look for in a home, filled with interesting, absorbing things that speak of his life, his travels and his many passions. What a wonderful character. And Morocco..One of my favorite places and vibes in the world...next to India of course.
hugs
Laura (fatlama)
I think this may the the only interior inspiration i'll ever need. Thank you.
Thank you for this entry here and for the link to the Times.
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