Parisian Walkways: Galerie Véro-Dodat

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PA R I S I A N WA L K WAY S ❘ G A L E R I E V É R O - D O D AT

GALERIE VÉRO-DODAT One of a dying breed of covered passages, this gallery of shops might have lost some its popularity, but none of its old-world charm, says Jeffrey T Iverson

LIBRAIRIE BERNARD GAUGAIN 13 Galerie Véro-Dodat Tel. +33 1 45 08 96 89 A bookstore out of another era, too minuscule for casual browsing, this is the treasure hoard of 83-year-old Bernard Gaugain, who specialises in art books and artist monographs. His clientele includes celebrated New Yorker cover artist Pierre Le-Tan, who comes for Gaugain’s rare, exquisitely bound books of illuminations and engravings.

R & F CHARLE For 35 years, string musicians have come to this charming shop to repair their old instruments and buy new ones. Stars like folk legend Steve Earle, songwriter Francis Cabrel or the swinging Stéphane Sanseverino all come to find a one-of-akind 1960 Martin or Gibson, a Django Reinhardtstyle Selmer Maccaferri guitar, or perhaps a banjo, Dobro or ukulele.

T IMAGES © J. T. IVERSON

RESTAURANT VÉRO-DODAT

17 Galerie Véro-Dodat Tel. +33 1 40 20 96 74

he passage couvert, these glass-roofed shopping arcades which flourished in early 19th-century Paris, owed their success in part to a promise inherent in their architecture – the capacity to transport their visitors to another place. In the 1800s, a passage couvert offered Parisians the chance to step away from the mud and hazards of a city without sidewalks into a realm both spotless and safe. It was an opportunity to escape the rain for somewhere warm and dry; to walk out of the darkness of night, and enter the sublime luminescence of gas lights. It was to leave behind the old for the modern, the unsightly for the beautiful, the quotidian for the luxurious. And of all the covered passages in Paris, perhaps none has embodied this promise like Galerie Véro-Dodat. Built in 1826 between 19 rue Jean-Jacques Rousseau and 2 rue Bouloi, steps from Palais-Royal and the Louvre, Galerie Véro-Dodat is neither the longest, nor the tallest, nor the most resplendent Paris passageway, yet it is somehow one of the most affecting. It may be the uncommon harmony of its neoclassical décor –

Galerie Eric Philippe (no. 25) specialises in 20th-century furniture from Scandinavia, America, Austria and France

19 Galerie Véro-Dodat Tel. +33 1 45 08 92 06 One of the most intimate, original tables between Palais-Royal and Les Halles is also one of the most reasonably priced. For more than 25 years, Gilles and Danila Gomond have run this petite restaurant where in-the-know clientele come to dine on simple, richly flavoured, made-fromscratch cuisine amidst 19th-century splendour.

boutiques with mahogany façades and arched windows framed in gilded copper, each separated by a pair of marble columns and mirrors, topped by a globed lamp and a sculpture of a winged cherub surrounded by horns of plenty. The ceiling alternates between glass panels and ravishing frescoes of gods and men at play. Below, black and white diamond-shaped marble paving creates the illusion of a passage to infinity. The 1830 traveller’s guide Le Nouveau Conducteur de l’Étranger à Paris praised the “elegance and convenience” of all the new passages couverts, but reserved its most poetic lines for “Véro-Dodat, with its shimmering marble and gilding”… “To traverse it at night when it is illuminated, the flickering lights multiplying in the mirrors on the walls, is to find ourselves transported to an enchanted world.” Over the years, even as covered passages have gone out of fashion, Galerie Véro-Dodat has retained its transporting power. In the 1920s, artists like the writer Colette fell under the charm of the place, its ornamentation and watery calm evoking for her a marvellous “air of Venice”. Now, nearly two centuries after its construction, the forgotten, antiquated aura of

54 ❘ FRANCE TODAY Dec/Jan 2017

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