Bahia Palace, Marrakech

In the Marrakech medina, near the Mellah (Jewish quarter), the Bahia Palace sprawls across 8 hectares in an incoherent series of reception halls, living quarters, courtyards and gardens. It was built in two phases by father and son Grand Viziers, first 1859-1873 and then 1894-1900. Today, the palace is home to the Moroccan Ministry of Cultural Affairs and is still used by the king to host the occasional visiting dignitary.

The sedate façade reveals nothing of the splendid interiors, with elaborately carved, painted and inlaid cedar ceilings, vivid tile and marble floors and walls, stained glass windows and serene courtyards that seem a world away from the chaotic medina just outside. Some of the palace is closed to the general public, but those areas that are open do a good job representing the various moods of the palace as a whole.

Majorelle Garden, Marrakech

Jacques Majorelle's villa/studio, now the Berber Museum

Jacques Majorelle’s villa/studio, now the Berber Museum

Beginning in the 1920s and for nearly 40 years thereafter, French ex-pat painter Jacques Majorelle lovingly designed and planted his exotic garden on the fringes of central Marrakech. Over the years, his original 4 acres became 10 acres, but the high cost of maintenance forced him to sell off pieces of the property one by one until 1961, when he sold the last, 2-acre parcel.

Fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent and his partner Pierre Bergé were instantly enchanted by the garden when they first visited in 1966. They bought it in 1980 after hearing it was to be destroyed.

Inside the garden, the dusty, blazing intensity of Marrakech seems a world away. Only 2 acres, the garden feels intimate, even secret. Benches hide among the palm and bamboo groves. Babbling fountains sooth and refresh.

Jacques Majorelle painted structural elements in bold primary colors, against which the garden greenery really pops. The distinct blue used on his 1931 Cubist villa/studio and throughout the garden is now known as Majorelle Blue. In 2011 a very good little Berber Museum opened in the villa displaying items from the collection of YSL and Pierre Bergé.

Also in the garden, the Galerie Love displays the Love posters designed by Yves Saint Laurent, Boutique Majorelle sells pricey but quality gifts and mementos, and a shady café serves breakfast and lunch (but is best for a cold drink).

An hour is more than enough time to stroll the gardens and the small museum, but I’ve heard tales of hours lost in this leafy sanctuary.

The Majorelle Garden is located in Marrakech’s Ville Nouvelle, about a 5-minute drive or a 20-minute walk from the medina.

NAME THAT COUNTRY Episode 102

The village of Imlil is tucked into the High Atlas Mountains. Trekkers use Imlil as a base for climbing Mt. Toubkal, the highest peak in North Africa. However, you needn’t be a mountain climber to enjoy the crisp air, soaring views and traditional charms of this Berber village. It makes a great day trip from Marrakech, only 90 minutes away.

Can you name that county? 
See below for answers.

Continue reading

Maison de la Photographie, Marrakech

The Maison de la Photographie is a little gem of a museum, which captures a range of Moroccan life through photographs taken 1870-1950, as well as a fascinating 1957 documentary film.

The collection is arranged by region over three levels of a lovely riad in the Marrakech medina. An hour or so spent in the serene galleries and rooftop terrace makes a nice contrast to the intensity of the old city outside. From the café, you have a 360-degree view across the medina to the Atlas Mountains. If you time your café visit to catch the sunset, with the evening call to prayer ringing out over the city, it’s especially magical.

Reasonably priced prints are for sale in the museum shop.

The Maison de la Photographie can be tricky to locate in the medina maze.
A Ya’lla guide will lead you right there.

Click to see Ya’lla tours to Morocco.

Foto(shop) Friday – Morocco 2

Here are a few more of my low quality images of Morocco redeemed by Photoshop filters. If you like these, there are more here.

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

The leather works in the Fez medina; it's meant to look like it smells.

The leather works in the Fez medina; it’s meant to look like it smells.

in the medina of Fez

in the medina of Fez

Ait Ben Haddou kasbah near Ouarzazate

Ait Ben Haddou kasbah near Ouarzazate

the Draa Wadi Valley

the Draa Wadi Valley

the Koutoubia Minaret, Marrakech

the Koutoubia Minaret, Marrakech

Foto(shop) Friday – Morocco

I recently came across a pile of prints from a trip to Morocco in 2001. Most are not very good quality and after scanning, they’re even worse. Good excuse to go to town with Photoshop. Woohoo!

Happy Friday

Rabat, Morocco

Rabat, Morocco

Todra Gorge, Morocco

Todra Gorge, Morocco

Kasbah Taourirt, Ouarzazate, Morocco

Kasbah Taourirt, Ouarzazate, Morocco

somewhere in Morocco...

somewhere in Morocco…

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca, Morocco

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca, Morocco

Koutoubia Minaret, Marrakech, Morocco

Koutoubia Minaret, Marrakech, Morocco

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca, Morocco

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca, Morocco

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca, Morocco

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca, Morocco

Fez Medina, Morocco

Fez Medina, Morocco

Ait Ben Haddou, Ouarzazate, Morocco

Ait Ben Haddou, Ouarzazate, Morocco

village in the Atlas Mountains, Morocco

village in the Atlas Mountains, Morocco

See tours to Morocco here.
See more pictures of Morocco here.
Read posts about Morocco here and here and here.