urban archaeology: sleeping beauty’s paris apartment discovered

70-years-isolated-apartment-paris-marthe-de-florian-1

Photo: GETTY

hi guys! i just had to post this.  for me it really stirs the imagination. enjoy!

Parisian flat containing €2.1 million painting lay untouched for 70 years

For 70 years the Parisian apartment had been left uninhabited, under lock and key, the rent faithfully paid but no hint of what was inside

By Henry Samuel in Paris
Published: 7:49PM, 04 Oct 2010

Mrs de Florian, a ‘demimondaine’ never returned to her Paris flat after the war and died at the age of 91 in 2010.

Behind the door, under a thick layer of dusk lay a treasure trove of turn-of-the-century objects including a painting by the 19th century Italian artist Giovanni Boldini.

239446-original1-0k31y

The woman who owned the flat had left for the south of France before the Second World War and never returned.

But when she died recently aged 91, experts were tasked with drawing up an inventory of her possessions and homed in on the flat near the Trinité church in Paris between the Pigalle red light district and Opera.

70-years-isolated-apartment-paris-marthe-de-florian-4

Entering the untouched, cobweb-filled flat in Paris’ 9th arrondissement, one expert said it was like stumbling into the castle of Sleeping Beauty, where time had stood still since 1900.

“There was a smell of old dust,” said Olivier Choppin-Janvry, who made the discovery. Walking under high wooden ceilings, past an old wood stove and stone sink in the kitchen, he spotted a stuffed ostrich and a Mickey Mouse toy dating from before the war, as well as an exquisite dressing table.

239451-original1-lw4c0-680x1024

Photo: GETTY

But he said his heart missed a beat when he caught sight of a stunning tableau of a woman in a pink muslin evening dress.

The painting was by Boldini and the subject a beautiful Frenchwoman who turned out to be the artist’s former muse and whose granddaughter it was who had left the flat uninhabited for more than half a century.

Giovanni Boldini

The muse was Marthe de Florian, an actress with a long list of ardent admirers, whose fervent love letters she kept wrapped neatly in ribbon and were still on the premises. Among the admirers was the 72nd prime minister of France, George Clemenceau, but also Boldini.

70-years-isolated-apartment-paris-marthe-de-florian-5

The expert had a hunch the painting was by Boldini, but could find no record of the painting. “No reference book dedicated to Boldini mentioned the tableau, which was never exhibited,” said Marc Ottavi, the art specialist he consulted about the work.

When Mr Choppin-Janvry found a visiting card with a scribbled love note from Boldini, he knew he had struck gold. “We had the link and I was sure at that moment that it was indeed a very fine Boldini”.

He finally found a reference to the work in a book by the artist’s widow, which said it was painted in 1898 when Miss de Florian was 24.

The starting price for the painting was €300,000 but it rocketed as ten bidders vyed for the historic work. Finally it went under the hammer for €2.1 million, a world record for the artist.

“It was a magic moment. One could see that the buyer loved the painting; he paid the price of passion,” said Mr Ottavi.

October 7, 2010. Tags: . Paris, Paris Apartments.

153 Comments

  1. cityfarmer replied:

    I JUST read this at paris atelier … wow!!!!
    what a story

    hugs darling

    Like

  2. Splendid Sass replied:

    Oh. My. Goodness. I would love to go into this apartment and see everything. Such lovely things.
    Thank you for sharing this!
    Teresa

    Like

  3. Karen Sugarman replied:

    What a haunting and beautiful story. I suspect the gorgeous Boldini painting was not the only lovely item left behind.

    Like

  4. Anette replied:

    This is such a romantic and beautiful story. I wonder why she never returned though…

    Like

    • Helena replied:

      You have to remember, France after the war was very different, as any country under occupation would be. I would imagine that for some people it was impossible to imagine a city so drastically different from the city they left, that to return was an impossibility.

      Like

      • magar replied:

        She put it off… until tomorrow…

        Like

      • Hans replied:

        What do You mean, very different? The Germans had been ther for a few years but they did not change anything as far as I know.

        Like

      • CarolMaeWY replied:

        Hans, oh never would the “Germans” change Paris, it was occupied by Nazi’s. Have you lived in an occupied country? Have you read any history about things before 1980?

        Like

      • Carole Resplandy replied:

        Strange the net curtains are modern,what about gas and electric bills?

        Like

  5. Judith replied:

    Lol! I just read your comment and then popped over to read the post! We are on the same wave length! Oops! What a romantic story! Can you just imagine the incredible objects left there!?! I wonder if there were jewels or clothing and did you see all of the other art. Le sigh!!! I was more interested in trying to see all of the little details in the photo than anything else. The falling wallpaper and those curtains! I love that there is still magic in this world.
    Xoxo
    Judith~

    Like

    • LI2PHX replied:

      The Apartment is Absolutely perfect. Miss de Florian must have really wanted to perserve Very Happy Time in her young life. I have family that lived in Europe during WWII.

      Like

  6. Chic and Charming replied:

    What an amazing story, like a fairy tale! It would have been so amazing to be the guys who got to catalog the apartment.

    Like

  7. Nita@ModVintageLife replied:

    Fascinating! Don’t you wish it could all be left as is? I’d love to come peak in that room left for all those years. They should just rope it off with fancy velvet ropes and let people come view it like art in a museum.

    Like

    • Alessio replied:

      So true. I was thinking exactly the same… But, this is a greedy world… :-/

      Like

    • Dawn replied:

      I completey agree!!!!!

      Like

    • Martha replied:

      I absolutely agree. Instead we have people “curate” rooms like this based on old photos. Here is a REAL one. It should definitely have been left alone. Cleaned, roped off, charge admission, but left alone.

      Like

    • Lyn de Jong replied:

      absolutely..so sad how the headline of this article is ‘2.1 Million painting’..that apartment held a part of History caught in time and told of a life kept in secret for all those years..to now be pull apart for for money.. I find that incredibly sad

      Like

  8. Tanya replied:

    What an amazing story. Sometimes truth is stranger than fiction.

    Like

  9. Gypsy Purple-Chamara replied:

    What an amazing story!!! Thanx for sharing!!!

    Like

  10. Linda replied:

    I would love to have been the first one through the door. I think there are many places like this, left behind and the family just leaves empty because someone doesn’t want to sell it-Napoleonic laws tend to keep things from being sold easily.

    Like

  11. Bonnie replied:

    I’m totally fascinated by stories like this of long lost treasures! Just look at the beautiful dress she is wearing! Do you think she is sitting on a chaise or on the edge of a bed? I found more beautiful paintings by Giovanni Boldini on the blog Scala Regia…
    http://scalaregia.blogspot.com/2009/02/giovanni-boldini.html. Apparently he was friends with Edgar Degas. And here… http://www.giovanniboldini.org/
    Thank you for sharing your discovery!

    Like

    • Bill replied:

      It looks like a sofa or chaise. I think it would of been a scandal if she was painted sitting on her bed or any bed back in those days. Wish I could find a place like that. Hope some of the collections went to a museum and the new owner of the apartment keeps the interior intact.

      Like

  12. Fabulously French replied:

    Wow – wish that I could make a discovery like this. I dream of the day that I come across an old house that has been closed for years packed full of lovely French “goodies”.

    Leeann x

    Like

  13. vicki replied:

    I LOOOOVE this! Thanks for sharing..my imagination has been stirred and my heart is racing. Just the thought that there could be many more French apartments and countryside chateaus that are abandoned…

    Like

  14. kath replied:

    Thank you so much for posting this. It just made me sigh and believe more in Fairy Tales. How romantic and amazing. I hope someone documented this in great detail. It would probably make a lovely book…

    Like

  15. Vicki Archer replied:

    Hello Claudia….What a fantastic story…I wish it could be kept as is…such a fabulous time capsule. I hope all is great in your world, xv.

    Like

    • Dawn replied:

      I completely agree Vicki!!! wow!!!

      Like

  16. Lauren replied:

    I am thrilled you have posted on this! It is amazing and you are the first site I have found who has the Ostrich image!!

    Like

  17. Acquired Objects replied:

    OMG I love it! How exciting to stumble upon such a time capsule. I would have given anything to have been able to troll through that place too. Thank you for such an amazing post!

    Like

  18. Julienne replied:

    How exciting to have been there! But that carpet, the mirror, the books I could look at that room for hours. Imagine it just sitting there for all those years, the mind boggles!!! A really lovely post.

    Like

  19. liza replied:

    I have a recurring dream like this, but it’s my apartment and I finally remember to go there after decades. Really odd, but curiously satisfying dreams.

    Who paid the rent on the flat? That, to me, is the oddest part. Who would keep paying, but never visit, or clean it out?

    I adore Boldini.

    Thanks for this, Claudia.

    Like

  20. Beadboard UpCountry replied:

    OMG! Just look at the way her dress is portrayed by the artist!!! It looks like incandescent gossamer….She is gorgeous!!!! To think that this stuff still happens is amazing!!!!!!!!!Thanks Claudia!!!

    Like

  21. Leslie replied:

    A magical, fantasy-inspiring post. Thank you.

    Like

  22. Dianne replied:

    How absolutely amazing ~ imagine walking into that appartment layered in dust and then finding this amazing painting~ it’s almost like a fairy-tale. I love the painting it is so… very exquisite! i am still sitting here utterly bewildered after reading this post.
    ~Dianne~

    Like

  23. Elizabeth replied:

    I wan to know more about Mrs. de Florian. This story is marvelous.

    Like

  24. beverley christenson replied:

    Claudia,
    this is what makes you so different, the romance the intriuge. the glamour, you see it in all the perfect
    imperfections of life.
    I can even see this ability growing over the years,go for it girl.
    The world needs more stories to uplift our hearts,thank you for this post love Bev.

    Like

  25. lancerika replied:

    Absolutely breathtaking!
    I’m at a loss for words..
    truly a relic from a bygone age..a treasure.

    Like

  26. Eric Aeschliman replied:

    WOW! I wish I could find a floor plan of the apartment! One article described it as “Large,” and living in Paris ain’t cheap! … and what more could be said about the beautiful, mysterious, romantic story and the wonderful treasures left behind by Madam de Florian!

    Like

  27. Luna Campbell replied:

    Wow – how beautiful. What an amazing find, but so sad that the woman didn’t ever return to live there. She must have had a nice life in the south of France…
    Luna Loves…

    Like

  28. sheila replied:

    this story has to have more detail….surely someone will publish a book showing this lovely place and follow up on the who, where, why ….so so romantic….gives me hope there is still magic out there

    Like

  29. katie kirby replied:

    It’s so beautiful! The story and the images!!!

    Like

  30. le petit cabinet de curiosites replied:

    I love this story. I wish I would have been the 1st one to open the door .
    They should make a movie

    Like

    • Dawn replied:

      I completely agree 100%!!!!!

      Like

  31. Lonni replied:

    Just sad, how you can take such a amazing story and turn it into money

    Like

  32. Diane replied:

    What a wonderful story! I especially loved the Clemenceau connection and that all those letters survived. A wonderful project for someone to edit and publish – think of the fabulous details of life during those times.

    Like

  33. Susan replied:

    Oh, this conjures memories… my parents were packrats on a pretty grand scale. After their deaths it took me three years to sort through their belongings and those of my mother’s parents. There was everything that had ever passed through my life as well as theirs– every drawing I’d created as a child, every toy (both mine and hers), love letters written before their marriage while my father was stationed in Korea. Among the treasures I found were a calendar where my mother had noted the day she met the boy who would become my father, sketches she made of him while they were in high school, paintings of my grandmother and sketches of me at two days old. She must have been sketching in her hospital bed.

    Like

    • Beverley Preston. replied:

      Wow, you also could write a book on your life! What a gift for generations to come! I just love these stories, I am a hopeless romantic, I guess! Blessings!

      Like

    • Heide replied:

      I hope you realize the blessings that you received with your family treasures … and, please, chronicle them for many that are not as lucky (smile)

      Like

  34. Dermott Banana replied:

    The dates in this story are all wrong.
    She was 24 in 1898, so she was born around 1878.
    Yet she died 112 years after she was 24, at the age of 91?
    The story says the room was locked away for 70 years. But was that starting in 1900, like the article says, and this room was discovered in 1970?
    Or was it locked away when she went into exile following the German occupation in 1940, and it’s just been discovered 70 years later?
    Something doesn’t smell right, and it’s not 70-year-old dust.

    Like

    • Magnus Holmgren replied:

      The artist’s muse and the subject of the painting was her grandmother, “whose granddaughter it was who had left the flat uninhabited”.

      One expert said it was *like* time had stood still since 1900, which isn’t a statement of fact as to when the apartment was abandoned.

      Like

      • Carole Resplandy replied:

        If you look at the curtains to the right of the dressing table,they are modern curtains ,not 1920 0r 1930’s,something is not right.What happened to reading the gas and electric.Did no one notice the shutters were closed for so many years.

        Like

  35. Sarah @ Natural History replied:

    What a wonderful, wonderful story. And to think that all of those treasures had been lying undisturbed for so many years…

    A Caravaggio was discovered in my own native Dublin a few years ago in a Jesuit dining room, quite by chance – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Taking_of_Christ_%28Caravaggio%29

    Like

  36. BarbG replied:

    Thanks for revealing this beautiful apartment. Many
    treasures under the dust.

    Like

  37. Eddie Ross replied:

    Such a great post! Thanks for sharing!!

    E+J

    Like

  38. The Shutter replied:

    Great post. Love your site, I’ll be back.

    Like

  39. Ashley replied:

    This is absolutely AMAZING!! This story just really makes my day xoxoxo

    Like

  40. CultureChoc2010 replied:

    WOW!

    Like

  41. Sarah @ Maison Boheme replied:

    Oh this is marvelous! What a treasure trove. Thanks for posting… you never cease to delight me!

    Like

  42. Gee replied:

    This sounds almost too good to be true! What a wonderful story of finding such wonderful treasures held as if in a time capsule.

    Like

  43. Jade replied:

    Just magical…I wonder why she didn’t go back to the apartment; maybe a lost love was involved and yet the place still held her heart?
    :) Jade

    Like

  44. Reyna replied:

    Wow….enchanting! Can you imagine? Just wow! It sounds like something from a fairytale!

    Like

  45. Malin replied:

    Hello Claudia, what a story! I’m gonna post this on my blog (with links to you!) Love your blog by the way
    check out mine!

    Like

  46. Sleeping Beauty! « Nordic Rooms replied:

    […] read the whole of this incredible story go to  parisapartment. who has the full […]

    Like

  47. how to get to sleep replied:

    Wow, nice! I want to go to there

    Like

  48. coquine replied:

    Fantastic story, hope u have more like this one

    Like

  49. Quinton Quesnel replied:

    My spouse and i extremely like what we place here. Really new along with wise. A single dilemma however. I’m operating Chrome using Debian along with components of your respective existing style bits can be a minor wonky. My spouse and i know it’s not only a standard build. However it’s a specific thing for you to preserve in mind. My spouse and i hope who’s will certainly support along with continue to keep up the major good quality producing.

    Like

  50. photomfa replied:

    what an incredible find. The Mickey Mouse stuffed animal is pretty awesome.

    Like

  51. ihath replied:

    what a story

    Like

  52. Carla Wolf replied:

    What an amazingly romantic story…

    Like

  53. christine ashby replied:

    I would have love to be the first one to walk into that apartment. So many treasures and history. Interesting that the woman never bothered to go back considering how much she had left behind. Art historians are salivating.

    Like

  54. MB replied:

    Hello: As to the math, the apartment belonged to the granddaughter of Marthe de Florian. The granddaughter must have inherited the portrait of her grandmother, as well as the items of provenance. Perhaps it was her grandmother’s whole apartment’s content that she inherited, and things were left untouched far longer than just WWII. – M

    Like

    • BellaDonna (@BelleWest925) replied:

      I love this theory!! I think you’re right. They said it was ‘as if it had been frozen in time since 1900’. It looks to me (from the article below) that the apartment belonged to the grandmother (Boldini’s muse), and the granddaughter ‘inherited’ it with all of her grandmother’s belongings after she died. Apparently, there was a great deal of wealth in this family, considering it was a ‘large flat’, and you can tell it was well appointed. And, the fact that rent was paid on it for 70 years when she wasn’t even living there! … It was a ‘shrine’ to her grandmother… left intact with the love letters and calling cards of her ‘clientele’. Excellent!

      http://www.mysinchew.com/node/46082

      Like

  55. Bea of Beabloguistan replied:

    It’s amazing, and so romantic… thanks for this discovery !

    Like

  56. Evgeniya replied:

    Ah, I wish I could have been the one to walk in there first! It’s magestic, I don’t understand why the lady never went back to this treasure alcove.

    Like

  57. Hailee Elizabeth Johnston replied:

    I can’t get over the stuffed ostrich.

    Like

  58. Mind Sieve 9/19/11 « Gloria Oliver replied:

    […] Unkrich shared a link to a cool story – Urban Archeology: Sleeping Beauty’s Paris Apartment Discovered.  Untouched treasures from the 1940′s! Really neat surreal […]

    Like

  59. J.Vu replied:

    That money better have been put to a good cause…

    Like

    • Cheryl S. replied:

      “That money better have been put to a good cause”….or what?
      You sound like a socialist.
      Just enjoy the post without getting political and ruining it for others.

      Like

    • Lisa replied:

      That money belongs to the family and they may use it any way they see fit !!! Who the hell are you to say what they do with their money? A NOBODY !!

      Like

      • Heide replied:

        Thanks to the previous 2 ladies for their ‘to the point ‘replies!

        Like

  60. Christina replied:

    Wow! This just made Paris even more romantic, mysterious, and exciting for me! Thanks for sharing :)

    Like

  61. Lunneth replied:

    I live near Paris and I just want to say: why it’s not me?

    Like

  62. Heaps Cool Stuff | Fat Aus replied:

    […] This apartment in Paris was left untouched for 70 years! The woman who owned it left for the South of France after WWII and never returned but paid rent up until she died last year. Inside the apartment was a painting worth millions of dollars! […]

    Like

  63. Mary Griswold replied:

    Fairy tales really do come true for some people, who have left behind magical mementos from their lives. Wonderful true story!

    Like

  64. thing i like thursday. - Niotillfem replied:

    […] sleeping beauty’s paris apartment discovered. […]

    Like

  65. Sara replied:

    Oh my God, it’s like a dream. Absolutely beautiful!

    Like

  66. Jon replied:

    SO what you are saying is that all these items were kept safe by her until she died, then everyone went in a ransacked her possessions…I hope the family got the money at least. If I were her I would be haunting some people.

    Like

    • The Paris Apartment replied:

      Well at least they got photos of the place. What should they do? Keep it as a museum?

      Like

      • Lisa replied:

        If they want to, it’s a time capsule. One that I would love to see.

        Like

  67. rencontre paris replied:

    je passe boire le cafe quand je passe a paris !

    Like

  68. Robert replied:

    There is a certain key phrase in the article that makes this a bit less romantic.

    “Mrs de Florian, a ‘demimondaine’ never returned to her Paris flat after the war and died at the age of 91 in 2010.”

    The key word here is “demimondaine” which carries roughly the same meaning as courtesan or a high-class prostitute.

    Like

    • hellolovely replied:

      Eh, Gigi was still a romantic story, and she was a demimondaine. Sure, in reality, I’m sure it wasn’t really romantic because of that, although she may also have just been someone’s mistress (which fits into the definition of the word). I bet there’s quite a story there, though, if she left suddenly and never returned.

      Like

    • Heide replied:

      Glad someone else picked up on this BUT … makes the story actually even more intriguing …

      Like

  69. The Paris Apartment replied:

    Oh that is a bit torrid and maybe not even accurate. I wonder what prompted the use of that word? Who was she exactly with everything from Mickey Mouse to taxidermy in the apartment?!

    Like

    • Heide replied:

      Actually, Mme de Florian was nothing more or less than so many famous Ladies of Society that kept their “Salons” where artist and poets would meet their likes …

      Like

  70. Robert replied:

    I have done some more digging. Seems She was an actress as well as a high-level prostitute.

    And I have not been able to dig up any information on the type of acting. Ideally, the best person to converse with would have been the now deceased grand-daughter who was paying the rent on the flat. There has also been no mention that I have seen to indicate any surviving family members.
    Further digging suggests that Boldini did not have any children either since he did not marry until he was 86. No mention of any offspring in any of the articles that I have read so far.
    The love letters that are mentioned in the above article could be handy in determining more of the story. The love letters seem to have been of a racy nature as mentioned by the French Press.

    The flat itself is located near the then red-light district of Pigalle. The grand-daughter lived in the same flat until she fled to the south of France just before the war. (information provided by the Luxe Chronicles)

    There were calling cards from senior statesmen within the flat, and according to the article I have read on http://www.mysinchew.com/node/46082, she hosted many lovers within the flat.

    Like

  71. The Paris Apartment replied:

    Wow that is really interesting stuff! Fascinating! Funny that I have not seen a thing since the article was written either about her or what happened to the contents of the apartment. I have a feeling there’s a story there.
    Maybe you’re the person to uncover it?
    Thank you so much for this, it’s really juicy and gets my imagination going. Please let me know if you pursue this any further!

    Like

  72. Inspiration Dictates…. | A BOHEMIAN GIRL replied:

    […] I ran across an article on The Paris Apartment website and my romantic imagination was immediately sparked. The writer wrote of a Parisian […]

    Like

  73. Off-topic klo 06:00-24:00 - Sivu 1903 replied:

    […] […]

    Like

  74. paris apartment replied:

    The information available here is very great. Keep the flow going on.

    Like

  75. Bill replied:

    What a great story and find, but so many questions. Why did she not come back?? Was everything sold?? Did anything go to a museum?? Was the apartment sold or rented to another tenant?? Is the interior still intact?? Regarding the rent, was there rent control over the years?? Renting a large place like this is very expensive. The owner, amazingly over 70 years would have the right to access of the apartment if something went wrong, such as a broken water pipe. Seeing the water damage in one photo, would suggest that the water went into the unit below. The photo’s look staged. I can’t see the window treatments open for 70 years. The sun light would of damaged the fabrics, paintings and furniture. Also, it was customary to cover furnishings if you were not going to be there for some time. Lastly, amazingly, no one broke in there?? Including the Nazis, they would of took what they wanted and lived in such a fine place during the war. Hope someone writes a book about this families history. Thanks for the posting this………….

    Like

    • Carole Resplandy replied:

      I note that the curtains to the right of the dressing table look of a modern design,pre war curtains were not like that they would have been cotton lace,and I am sure they would be faded and rotted.Looks wrong to me?

      Like

      • Karin replied:

        My thoughts exactly!

        I’m also having a hard time believing that anyone fell for this obvious hoax. But I guess we all believe what we want to believe… and art auction houses certainly aren’t renowned for their integrity!

        Like

  76. Shelli replied:

    No one has mentioned the incredible picture of either a small moa (long extinct NZ bird) or emu with a satin cosmetic jewellery encrusted shawl just thrown over it – now where and why did that come from??

    Like

  77. urban archaeology: sleeping beauty’s paris apartment discovered | Cluckfield replied:

    […] Parisian flat containing €2.1 million painting lay untouched for 70 years This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink. ← The hippies were right. […]

    Like

  78. miklos halasz replied:

    Very intresting story ..Everybody is going that way sooner or later.(hope later .

    Like

    • Heide replied:

      Haha .. Miklos, thanks for the chuckle … gossoenem … (obviously I don’t know how to spell it, lol)

      Like

  79. Untapped Web Bites – BART Musicians, NY Pop-Up Cafés, Zwanze Day in NOLA « Untapped Travel replied:

    […] Sleeping Beauty’s apartment discovered, left untouched for nearly a century. [The Paris Apartment] […]

    Like

  80. callmecarol2 replied:

    Please tell us more about the love letters. They are a lost art.

    Like

  81. Beauty replied:

    The quick red wolf jumped over the lazy dog

    Like

  82. Tim replied:

    This is the type of apartment I want to live in for the rest of my life.

    Like

    • M. Opinion replied:

      Well, mine has just about that much dust but the contents are far less interesting . . .

      Like

      • Heide replied:

        LOL … love your sense of humor!

        Like

  83. Untapped Web Bites - BART Musicians, NY Pop-Up Cafés, Zwanze Day in NOLA replied:

    […] Sleeping Beauty’s apartment discovered, left untouched for nearly a century. [The Paris Apartment] […]

    Like

  84. read this replied:

    This blog was… how do I say it? Relevant!! Finally I’ve found something that helped me. Many thanks!

    Like

  85. www.londonrelocationservices.com replied:

    Few had retired due to physical injuries and others for the age factor.
    London was at his peak after he published White Flag and Sea Wolf.
    It was a world away from the modern-day Olympics –
    everything was built and organised in less
    than two years, and at a fraction of today’s costs.

    Like

  86. Paris apartment untouched for 70 years. - PeachParts Mercedes ShopForum replied:

    […] apartment untouched for 70 years. urban archaeology: sleeping beauty’s paris apartment discovered | the paris apartment Wonder why this wasn't big news a few years ago. Just discovered it.

    Like

  87. cardsharing åka fast replied:

    You really make it appear so easy together with your presentation
    however I to find this matter to be actually something which I think I’d never understand. It sort of feels too complex and very large for me. I’m having a look ahead in your next put up, I’ll try to get the dangle of it!

    Like

  88. ddrio replied:

    next to the mouse is that Porky Pig ?

    Like

  89. Gent replied:

    I think this is maybe a fake story to push a fakepainting into art market. Hos is it possible that nobody was in the flat for this long time ? in Paris ? impossible

    Like

  90. a fairy tale for the weekend | Retro Bureau replied:

    […] E spotted this amazing story a couple of days ago about a Paris apartment that lay untouched for 70 years. I particularly like […]

    Like

  91. Carole Resplandy replied:

    Perhaps it should have been kept intact.Sir Roy Strong is leaving his property to the Nation,but that is England and not France.

    Like

  92. Carole Resplandy replied:

    The net curtains next to the dressing table look modern,they would have been in cotton net,those look to white,and not discoloured ?

    Like

  93. tumblr backups replied:

    […] URBAN ARCHAEOLOGY: SLEEPING BEAUTY’S PARIS APARTMENT DISCOVERED […]

    Like

  94. film discussion questions website replied:

    Why people still use to read news papers when in
    this technological globe the whole thing is accessible on
    net?

    Like

  95. pea sheller replied:

    What i do not realize is actually how you are not actually a lot more neatly-appreciated than you may be now.
    You’re so intelligent. You recognize thus significantly when it comes to this subject, made me in my view imagine it from numerous various angles. Its like men and women aren’t involved
    unless it’s one thing to accomplish with Lady gaga! Your personal stuffs great. Always handle it up!

    Like

  96. seo replied:

    Marketing is not about tricking people to want things as may
    have been in the past, the modern consumer, Internet-savvy companies
    actually invited into their lives to talk to them if they offer something relevant and
    useful to them, through the following on Twitter or “taste” of your Facebook page.
    Write down the benefits that your products will bring to your customers and the problems
    that they will help them solve. They focus on all the parts which are important for internet marketing.

    Like

  97. BBW Mistress Central London replied:

    This website was…how do you say it? Relevant!! Finally I’ve found something that helped me.
    Kudos!

    Like

  98. Timesink: Abandoned Buildings | Whattayagonnado replied:

    […] Some look as though the owner simply got up and left. Like this: https://parisapartment.wordpress.com/2010/10/07/urban-archaeology-sleeping-beautys-paris-apartment-di… There’s got to be a movie in that […]

    Like

  99. Lisa replied:

    It was her granddaughter who fled and paid for the apartment to be kept. When the granddaughter died at 94 her heirs discovered this secret

    Like

  100. Bob replied:

    Is there a place to see more photos of this, I hope that it can be left as is or moved and displayed in a museum. I am so intrigued by these photos, it gives a real glimpse into the life of how someone lived at that time.

    Bob

    Like

    • Dawn replied:

      @Bob, I completely agree!! I wish they would do that, but I don’t know if they did or not.I was thinking the same thing and same way.I would have loved to see the inside and see how she lived back then. Talk about a time standing still,wow!! Talk about an amazing sight,wow!!!! A time capsule indead!

      Like

  101. the time that time stood still | the paris apartment replied:

    […] run around doing errands.  i took this afternoon to play around a little on the net. i wrote about a very romantic story in 2010 and it’s starting to circulate again without much new news. i dug a bit to try to conjure up […]

    Like

  102. donna adams replied:

    I know this is an article, but I need to know more. Just fab story. Please someone tell me there is more …..

    Like

    • donna adams replied:

      *sorry should’ve read, OLD article.

      Like

  103. Dream A Little Dream | Lilli Bean 23 replied:

    […] pics were from an article going around on Facebook – I thought they had a Storybook […]

    Like

  104. Eleonora replied:

    Потрясающая история “законсервированного” прошлого.
    О красоте женского портрета хочется сказать словами М.Цветаевой:
    “Чьи руки бережные трогали твои ресницы, красота?
    Когда и как, и кем, и много ли целованы твои уста?”

    Like

  105. 2014: The Year of Two Unusual Hues | Photography.xcuz.me replied:

    […] story behind this painting? Some of you may have already read it, but if not, the link is here. (My sister-in-law just sent me the link this week: I hadn’t read about it either.) […]

    Like

  106. visual stimulation 004 – interiors replied:

    […] dark muted colors of traditional Dutch painting and became inspired by the French Impressionists, Mrs de Florian’s “sleeping” apartment, and the cardboard city of Science of Sleep all pieced together to make one space i can be happy to […]

    Like

  107. biddie replied:

    Awe, please, we should just charter a plane, to allow all our wishful thoughts to come true. To be able to walk into this remarkable place and stand in wonder , to have our hearts feel , our minds drift into a time, when we may / or may not have been yet born. Our sight will give us the gift to cherish and the memory of being part of something that was saved. If I could just go and participate and see the untouched Paris apartment.

    Like

    • Dawn replied:

      I completely agree with you Biddle! It just needs to very carefully dusted all over the apartment,but make sure everything is left just as it was found,roped off inside in certain areas that should not be touched but is ok to see it and take pics if they are desired. But that apartment NEEDS to be preserved!!! I would love to see that place!!! OMG,WOW,what a sight that would be!!!Time has definentally stood still in that apartment,for sure!! Despite all the dust, wow! It’s AMAZING And BEAUTIFUL!!!!

      Like

      • biddie replied:

        Thank you for the response. I thought I stood alone as I was so taken and smittened when first reading this story. You are absolutely right. It should be preserved. Can`t imagine just leaving. To watch an old Nazi movie , one would vision this young girl fleeing from all the fear of seeing the Nazis caring their gear. OMG. Is right. If I had cash on the mahogoney, believe, those tickets would be bought just to walk down the street Dont know what floor this apartment was. But to look at the carved woodwork furniture. Yes rope off tour guide. Dusted. You are right.

        Like

  108. biddie replied:

    This unbelievable, believable story with extraordinary paintings, just about everywhere to be seen. The absolutely beautiful painting of, if I read correctly, of her grandmother. Now, for a moment of thought, just for that slight few seconds, did anyone look behind any of those paintings. Like, did the experts, remove the frame and take the back off to see, if any, yet another big wilderment? Or, in those days, were the paintings done without a back for support with frames? Not sure in those days would glass be with a framed picture or painting? OMG, just think, another hidden treasure to surprise everyone. I would never question the honesty on this story. This reason being everything appears outdated. Awe, look, where big bird is standing by his/her hind legs, looks like Mona Lisa painting??? leaning against dresser.

    Like

  109. Katherine Akey replied:

    […] READ MORE HERE! […]

    Like

  110. black mold cleanup how to get rid of mice in your home replied:

    You’re so interesting! I don’t think I’ve truly read anything
    like this before. So wonderful to discover someone wit a
    few original thoughts on this topic. Really.. thank you for starting this
    up. This wesite is something that is needed on the web, someone
    with a bit of originality!

    Like

  111. the time that time stood still – The Paris Apartment replied:

    […] run around doing errands.  i took this afternoon to play around a little on the net. i wrote about a very romantic story in 2010 and it’s starting to circulate again without much new news. i dug a bit to try to conjure up […]

    Like

  112. Untapped Web Bites - BART Musicians, NY Pop-Up Cafés, Zwanze Day in NOLA | Untapped Cities replied:

    […] Sleeping Beauty’s apartment discovered, left untouched for nearly a century. [The Paris Apartment] […]

    Like

Leave a comment

Trackback URI