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    1. Travel & Culture

    Five reasons to head to Le Sud this summer

    A vineyard walk, a Saint-Tropez family house, a wicker atelier on the Rhône and a small island freshly returned to Bandol: summer stops where the South of France is making room for art and design well outside the gallery walls

    Reeme Idris's avatar
    By Reeme Idris
    published 18 June 2026
    in Features

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    Les Davids, Haute-Provence
    Les Davids, Haute-Provence
    (Image credit: Courtesy of Les Davids, Haute-Provence)
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    • Les Davids, Haute-Provence
    • Une Maison à Saint-Tropez, Saint Tropez
    • La Maison Vime, Vallabrègues
    • Dragon Hill, Mouans-Sartoux
    • Zannier Île de Bendor, Bandol
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    The South of France has spent a long time defined by its light and its coastline; this season, these openings suggest the region's cultural life can be found just as easily inland, on a river quay or offshore, and none of it requires a gallery booking.

    Scattered between the Luberon, the Var coast, the Rhône, the heights above Cannes and a seven-hectare island just offshore from Bandol, five addresses make for a pleasingly scattered cultural season. Paintings meet stained glass in a Romanesque priory, design moves through a Saint-Tropez house older than the resort town’s reputation, wicker will return to a Rhône village once sustained by willow, while ceramics inhabit a Couëlle landscape-house above Cannes, and Bendor reawakens with a welcome residue of parties, ateliers and glass workshops beneath the hotel polish.

    Les Davids, Haute-Provence

    Les Davids

    (Image credit: Courtesy of Les Davids)

    Les Davids sits high above the Luberon at 600 metres. The estate has been a working vineyard for some time, and earlier this year it opened a 2.5km promenade designed by Bas Smets, the Brussels-based landscape architect responsible for the Luma gardens in Arles and the surroundings of Notre-Dame de Paris. The route moves through eight distinct atmospheres, from oak forest and garrigue to lavender, olive grove and vineyard rows. Smets began with the territory already in front of him, drawing the path from the estate’s working ground, where vineyard rows give way to scrub and tree cover.

    Newly installed works by Tomás Saraceno, Vivian Suter, David Nash, Matthew Lutz-Kinoy and Lionel Sabatté now punctuate the walk, giving this phase of the estate the feel of a collection dispersed through planting, agriculture and woodland. At its centre is the Théâtre de Verdure, a natural amphitheatre inaugurated in 2024 and used for Les Estivales du Haut Calavon, the summer programme of concerts and readings.

    The walk also takes in Yves Zurstrassen’s studio on the estate before continuing nine kilometres south to the Musée de Salagon in Mane, where Zurstrassen’s Variations rouges is installed until 14 December 2026. The Belgian painter made the series in dialogue with Salagon’s Romanesque church and Aurélie Nemours’s stained-glass windows, completed in 1998; his vertical reds meet stone, glass and southern light at close range. lesdavids.fr/en

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    Une Maison à Saint-Tropez, Saint Tropez

    Une Maison à Saint-Tropez, Saint-Tropez

    (Image credit: Courtesy a Une Maison à Saint-Tropez, Saint-Tropez)

    For a fourth edition of Une Maison à Saint-Tropez, Isabelle Castanier returns to her family house at 17 avenue Foch, on Place des Lices. The building dates to 1789, its front door opening straight onto the square. From 6 June to 31 July, the house becomes the setting for Souvenirs d’enfance, an exhibition shaped around four childhood scenes: the hut, the snack, bath and the bedtime story.

    India Mahdavi takes on the goûter with brightly coloured furniture; Axel Chay starts from childhood treasures in cast aluminium; Jorge Suarez Kilzi imagines a flower-shaped bar with something of the beach cart about it; Marianna Ladreyt builds a piece to sit beneath a parasol. It sounds playful because it is, though Castanier’s house keeps the sentiment in check. Objects sit close to daily life, rooms stay recognisably rooms, and Saint-Tropez appears through seaside play, family memory and the small theatre of summer rituals. isabellecastanier.com

    La Maison Vime, Vallabrègues

    Wicker

    (Image credit: Anthony Watson from The World of Atelier Vime, Flammarion)

    Vallabrègues is a good place to remember that wicker once had an economy of its own. In the 18th century, the Rhône-side village counted hundreds of wicker workers among its inhabitants, with willow from the river feeding a busy local trade. Atelier Vime now occupies the Hôtel Drujon, built in 1730 and later home to a workshop installed in 1878, complete with a courtyard and soaking ponds for fresh wicker.

    On 23 May, Anthony Watson and Benoît Rauzy reopen La Maison Vime for the summer season. The shop runs until 12 September at 24 Quai du Rhône, with furniture, lighting, editions, vintage pieces, glassware and ceramics arranged through the house. It first appeared in 2022 as the atelier’s summer address, dedicated to the Vime world and its particular art de vivre; by now, its return has become part of the village calendar. Go for rattan, table linen, lamps, older pieces and the pleasure of seeing craft history still attached to an address. ateliervime.com

    Dragon Hill, Mouans-Sartoux

    Dragon Hill

    (Image credit: Courtesy of Dragon Hill)

    Dragon Hill sits in the heights above Cannes, on Chemin de Castellaras in Mouans-Sartoux. The house was built by Jacques Couëlle, the French architect-sculptor who worked in clay and plaster maquettes, sculpting his buildings into being and producing curved, cavernous interiors with no straight lines to speak of. His landscape-houses on the Côte d’Azur, and the resorts he designed for the Aga Khan on the Costa Smeralda in the 1960s, remain among the more singular pieces of 20th-century domestic architecture.

    From 13 May to November 2026, the house hosts Inhabiting the Landscape House, a site-specific exhibition by ceramicist Olivia Cognet. Trained in Nice and based in Vallauris, where she has taken over Roger Capron’s former studio, Cognet works across ceramic, lava, stone and metal at various scale, from tables and lamps to six-metre bas-reliefs. For Dragon Hill, she has made works for the Couëlle interior’s cavities, recesses and curves: a sculptural tapestry sofa produced with Lyon upholsterer Degut for one of the living rooms, and an outdoor garden lounge of stone chairs and tables set among the planting as monoliths. Brancusi, Noguchi and Gio Ponti are her stated reference points; Couëlle, this season, is the room she is in. Find more on Instagram

    Zannier Île de Bendor, Bandol

    Zannier Île de Bendor

    (Image credit: © DePasquale+Maffini for Zannier Hotels)

    A few minutes by boat from Bandol, Île de Bendor reopened after a five-year transformation by Zannier. Paul Ricard bought the seven-hectare island in 1950 and treated it as a miniature Mediterranean republic, complete with theatre, gallery, diving centre, wine museum, sculpture garden and glassmaking workshop. Dalí came, as did Joséphine Baker, Fernandel, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Mireille Darc and Youri Gagarine; the old photographs are reason alone to visit.

    Zannier’s version brings the island back as a 93-room hotel, arts destination and wellness retreat, with Delos, Soukana and Madrague forming separate addresses within the same small territory. The spa covers 1,200 sq m; the Rēsonance programme offers bioresonance, movement, vitality and beauty; restaurants and children’s programming make it open to all. In June, Bendor hosts a Fête de la Musique celebration, with boats running back to Bandol until 11.30pm. Bendor still has the charm of a place imagined in miniature: close enough to Bandol for an easy crossing, to witness the island returning to itself. zannierhotels.com

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    Reeme Idris
    Reeme Idris

    Reeme Idris is an Irish-Sudanese writer based in London. Her work examines how art, design, and travel intersect, often offering nuanced reflections on the role creativity and material culture play in shaping lived experience.

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