I like the fact that the apartment does not seem to have been burgled
or occupied.

- Anil Kumar


http://www.messynessychic.com/2012/05/09/the-paris-time-capsule-apartment/


The Paris Time Capsule Apartment
In "Nostalgia" "Paris" on May 9, 2012 at 2:13 pm
A Parisian apartment left untouched for over 70 years was discovered
in the quartier of Pigalle a few summers ago and I’ve been meaning to
share the pictures with you. Time to unlock the vault …



The owner of this apartment, Mrs. De Florian left Paris just before
the rumblings of World War II broke out in Europe. She closed up her
shutters and left for the South of France, never to return to the city
again. Seven decades later she passed away at the age of 91. It was
only when her heirs enlisted professionals to make an inventory of the
Parisian apartment she left behind, that this time capsule was finally
unlocked.





The team that had the honor of opening what must have been a very
stiff old lock for the first time in 70 years, likened the experience
to ‘stumbling into the castle of sleeping beauty’. The smell of dust,
the cobwebs, the silence, was overwhelming; a once in a lifetime
experience.



There is a further twist to the story. In the apartment a painting of
familiar style was discovered of a beautiful woman in pink. One of the
inventory team members suspected this might be a very important piece
of treasure. Along with the painting, they also found stacks of old
love letters tied with colored ribbon.



With some expert historical opinion, the ribbon-bound love letters
were quickly recognized as the calling card of none other than
Giovanni Boldini, one of Paris’ most important painters of the Belle
Époque. The painting was his. The beautiful woman pictured in the
painting was Mrs. de Florian’s grand-mother, Marthe de Florian, a
beautiful French actress and socialite of the Belle Époque. She was
Boldini’s muse. And, despite him being a married man, she was also his
lover. The art world went a bit nutty for the whole story and the
painting was later sold for $3 million at auction.



What I find so intriguing about this story is not so much the
discovered painting and the revelation of a love affair between a
great Italian painter and the beautiful actress in an enchanting era,
but more the story of Mrs. de Florian and why she stayed away from
Paris for so long.

What kept her away even after the war? Was she running away from
someone or something other than the Nazis? For all those decades, her
rent on the elegant apartment in a flourishing city had been
faithfully paid, but it was left it to freeze in time. It all sounds
like the perfect mystery.

via The Telegraph, photos by GETTY

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