Family

A stately, eclectic apartment in the heart of Paris's historic district

At

Constance, Xavier Eeckhout, Aimée, 5 years old and Joseph, 10 years old

A fire is crackling in the fireplace, but there’s an air of spring in this Parisian apartment with its high windows that overlook the first buds on display in a garden nestled behind the École des Beaux-Arts. The timeless, eclectic tone hits you as soon as you enter this beautiful family home, and as you cross an octagonal dining room with large checked floor tiles. Antiquity seamlessly blends with the 20th century combined with a dash of contemporary art. “Eclectic” is how Constance and Xavier Eeckhout describe their apartment’s décor. From spur-of-the-moment purchases to historic pieces, and patiently researched special interest works, this home to the couple and their kids embodies a passion for art and objects that is constantly being nurtured and renewed, and passed on to their children. The Socialite Family has settled down for a fireside chat.

Location

Paris

Author

Elsa Cau

Photographer

Clément Vayssières

L'hippopotame en marbre blanc de l'artiste François Pompon, la sculpture préférée de Joseph Eeckhout, 10 ans.

TSF

Constance, Xavier, please introduce yourselves.

Constance

I’m 39, married to a wonderful man and mum to two adorable kids. I worked in the art market for ten years. I’m now my own boss and work as a facial masseuse. I’ve got two kids, Joseph and Aimée who are ten and six respectively.

Xavier

I’m 50 and a gallerist. I have an art gallery near our flat in Saint Germain de Prés and I specialise in animal sculptures from the first half of the 20th century. As for me, I have four kids.

TSF

How did you find this apartment?

Xavier

We were living near Beaux-Arts and Constance was pregnant with Aimé. We were looking for an apartment with an extra bedroom but wanted to stay in this area. When I was much younger I had an estate agency and I kept in touch with local contacts, so I knew when the apartment was put up for grabs.

Constance

I remember we visited one March. The weather wasn’t good. It was a grey day, but still the view over the garden… It was simply stunning! It’s major selling point was the calm; the calm and the view of the trees.

Xavier

Indeed and, the calm and view of the Beaux-Arts’ garden, it faces south so gets plenty of sunshine on sunny days. Plus the kids’ bedrooms are upstairs, giving them their own space. I really liked the apartment’s layout. Notably the high ceilings and the place itself.

TSF

What’s your lifestyle like here?

Xavier

We spend plenty of time in the apartment. We’ve had a small country house in Oise for three years, where we go every weekend. But we live in the apartment during the week. I feel good here, the family feels good here, and we also entertain a lot. We have dinner parties at least once a week.

Constance

I spend my days here as I work from home. I turned the entrance-dining room part into a treatment room for my kobido massage practice. And, as Xavier says, we entertain a lot with plenty of guests dropping by, usually at the end of the day or in the evening rather than during the day.

TSF

Xavier, how long have you been a gallerist?

Xavier

I started out in 1999, so 25 years ago. I began as an auction crier at the Drouot auction house at the Puces de Vannes and then partnered up with a friend to open my first shop in rue Saint-Lazare. We worked together for five years. I then opened a small gallery on rue de la Grange-Batelière, followed by a second one on the same street. And then came my current gallery on the Rive Gauche, which I opened in 2018.

TSF

You still frequently work together?

Constance

Yes for all the exhibition opening nights – Xavier holds roughly two a year – and all the art fairs, notably the TEFAF in Maastricht which is held every March and is the gallery’s most important one.   I join Xavier for the first six days to help with the set-up, the gala dinner and the opening. We exhibited at FAB in September, it’s the new art fair that’s replaced the Biennale de Paris.

I've always loved animals: maybe it's because I come from a little village in Oise, who knows... All my grandparents worked on a farm

TSF

Xavier, why did you choose to specialise in animal sculpture?

Xavier

I’ve always loved animals: maybe it’s because I come from a little village in Oise, who knows… All my grandparents worked on a farm. I started as an antique dealer but then broadened my horizons. I also sold 19th and 20th century paintings and sculptures. I then decided to specialise in the first half of the 20th century and focus on sculpture simply because I like it.

TSF

Can you tell us about some of the artists featured in your gallery?

Xavier

The works I show represent a “niche” market – a pertinent French pun when it comes to animals (laughs). I exhibit works from 1910 to 1950. The best-known international artists (for the French at least) are François Pompon whose famous Polar Bear is on display at the Musée d’Orsay, and Rembrandt Bugatti, brother of the automobile designer, Ettore Bugatti. Obviously, I have works from lesser-known, but equally talented artists. I only exhibit works by Belgian, French and Swiss artists.

TSF

Do you influence each other’s tastes? Does your apartment reflect your tastes?

Xavier

We rarely disagree when it comes to a purchase or how we want to organise our home. I maybe have a more transient approach to objects, I don’t get as attached to them as Constance does. I can buy a painting and then sell it on two years later. Constance tends to keep things, but our tastes are very similar.

Constance

Personally, I like objects that have a sentimental value not necessarily a monetary one. Xavier often tells me to de-clutter! But we always manage to find a compromise. In recent years we’ve bought more contemporary items than before, which is also down to our taste. More colourful, elegant objects that make more of a mark than classical items.

TSF

How would you describe your shared taste?

Xavier

It’s very eclectic. We have a medley of objects and eras. For example, in the sitting room, there’s this 4th-century vase and a small painting by Geneviève, who very recently passed away. We like pops of colour in specific places, they wake up a room. There’s no real common thread… Two or three animal sculptures, some antiquity pieces, 20th-century…

TSF

So, do the kids find all this interesting?

Joseph

Yeah !

TSF

Do you like the gallery?

Xavier

Of my four children, Joseph and his elder sister, Marie, like the gallery most!

Joseph

I love drawing dad’s bronze sculptures as well as cleaning and moving them.

Xavier

Joseph also helps me set up and take down the gallery’s exhibitions. It’s become second-nature.

Constance

Joseph is very observant. At home, he’ll often notice if a piece has been moved or has disappeared, as in sold!

TSF

And you? How did your upbringing influence your tastes?

Constance

I remember my grandparents’ place. It was very old-fashioned, everything stayed in the same place, lots of Louis XV furniture. When I’d go over for lunch, it felt like walking into a museum. But I was also aware of how precious the objects and furniture were to them. We had to be really careful, never put a glass down on certain pieces of furniture in case it damaged the marquetry… My parents, though, would take me to flea markets. Then when I was at college I wanted to become an auctioneer, so I’d often go to the Hôtel Drouot auction house to check out its lots! I’ve also always loved materials: fabrics, heavy-ish curtains as well as historic house museums such as Camondo and Jacquemart-André in Paris. Their opulent decor may not be to my taste, but I love that’s it a French thing, a real cultural heritage.

Xavier

As for me, I wasn’t raised in an artistic environment, the word ‘art’ wasn’t exactly part of my family’s vocabulary! I was very close to my maternal grandparents who were a huge part of my upbringing and worked extremely hard on the farm. My dad liked regionally-made furniture, but it wasn’t my childhood or youth that introduced me to the world of art. It was a complete fluke, a total stroke of luck. I arrived in Paris when I was 18 and a year or so later, when I was an apprentice estate agent, I showed an apartment to the gallerist Yves Gastou. He subsequently invited me to the Biennale de Paris by way of a thank-you. It was a revelation! Funnily enough, in 2018 when we rented the apartment we live in, Yves Gastou was living in the same building.

TSF

Has moving your gallery from the Rive Droite to the Rive Gauche made a big difference?

Xavier

Yes, of course, it’s an entirely different clientele. It’s a completely different ballgame. I still love the Drouot quarter, and the auction house is like a second home. But it’s a part of town that you just pass through, it’s for buying and selling.  It’s an art dealer world and lots of Americans come here to ply their trade. That said, the way the market’s evolved means there are fewer art dealers and fewer Americans who stock up on art in France, unlike before. So, it’s a real plus to have a gallery in a more upmarket part of town. It may be less frequented, but it has plenty of cachet just like avenue Matignon. Being in a reputable area equates with having a high-end gallery.

TSF

What sort of clients does the Xavier Eeckhout Gallery attract?

Xavier

We have a largely European clientele – Swiss, Belgian, Luxembourgish, Dutch, British – some US clients, and most are art connoisseurs and serious collectors. I do very occasionally get passing trade, for example, someone who has spied and set their heart on a bronze horse. There’s always that luck-of-the-draw element. The passing clientele that previous art sellers welcomed barely exists today.

TSF

Do you have favourite pieces in your home that you’d like to show us?

Constance

I’d like so to show you a small painting in the sitting room that I love. It’s by Geneviève Asse, a Breton painter who studied under Nicolas de Staël. Her studio was on Île aux Moines, a district that holds a special place in my heart. Xavier gave me this painting three years ago as I’m very attached to Morbihan.  She painted sea and skyscapes, using a slightly matte blue-grey which became a characteristic style. The sky takes up most of this work. Our sitting room has a blue and pink theme.  There’s this Yves Klein table; most fans know his signature blue, but not his use of pink. We love it, it really brightens up the sitting room. One of Xavier’s clients offered to sell him loads of stuff including this table. He bought it and had it delivered that same day.

Xavier

I admit this isn’t very original as it’s my area of expertise, but I’ll go for this sculpture which I love. This elephant is by the French artist Marcel Demarle who had a similar style to Pompon. His story’s a touching one. He was an artist from the Paris region, who worked as a postman, but dedicated his life to sculpting. Whenever he had a bit of money to spare, he’d make a bronze. He died penniless, with no clients. Most of his works are on show in the La Piscine Museum in Roubaix and at Paris’s Pompidou Centre. This elephant was an unknown piece until it was discovered in a collection in Florida. It really love this sculpture.

Constance

There’s also this big painting, which is fun and a bit of a mickey-take. It’s a homage to Poliakof by one of my ancestors. He painted it in 1967. His name was Roger Evot. A specialist dealer who visited us here thought it was a work by the artist himself. The truth is we made a bit of a hullabaloo and displayed it like a masterpiece, when in fact it’s just a tribute.

Joseph

I like the hippo and I like Pompon. I like the way his animals look smooth.

TSF

There are also these two sconces in the sitting room, which are intruiging.

Xavier

These sconces weren’t here to begin with! I didn’t even buy them together. They’re made from tortoise shells, which are banned from export. One of them belonged to the painter Bernard Buffet. The shells were removed and put on a stand, so they could be used as fireguards. We had them wired up and turned into sconces. I really like the diffused light.

TSF

We can also see your love of antiquity, there are elements dotted all over your apartment.

Xavier

Constance and I love sculptures, fragments, and marble! There’s this small draped Roman piece. There’s a small Gandhara hand in the library (ed. an ancient Graeco-Buddhist style) that Yves Saint Laurent gave to one of his friends – I snapped it up at an auction twenty years ago.  So there you have it, we have eclectic tastes. Antique sculptures next to 1920s lamps by Just Andersen, a Danish artist, alongside a fountain element by Lalanne when he worked on a fountain project for the Noailles family, a small painting by Inès Longévial…  On the other side, between the windows, that seemingly antique female bust is actually a 1930s sculpture. The Giacometti-style bird above has more modest origins. It’s by an artist called Boulione, who isn’t an animal specialist. The contents of his studio were auctioned off in Drouot by Crait-Müller five or six years ago.

TSF

So what’s going on at the gallery right now?

Xavier

Our next big event is the TEFAF exhibition in March – it will be our 7th consecutive year. It’s our biggest event and attracts a broad range of international clients. We’ll be alongside esteemed and very high-end fellow professionals: we need to stand out, have a superb stand and display pieces that we specially set aside to exhibit every year. They’re masterpieces, our flagship works. So that’s the big project right now. On a more low-key note, Constance and I will be holding an animal exhibition in our garden and at our country house for a few days in June.

TSF

Are there any local places you’d like to recommend to us?

Constance

There are so many… Just to name a few, during a stroll along Boulevard Saint-Germain: at Charlotte Chesnais (169, Boulevard Saint-Germain, Paris 6) where you’ll find her jewelry, conceived as sculptures, timeless and so elegant. Just across the street, I love the paper tablecloths, pink neon lights, and primary colors that haven’t aged a day at Le Rouquet where I always have the herring with potatoes and oil (188, Boulevard Saint-Germain, Paris 6). A stop at L’Écume des pages is a must afterward (174, Boulevard Saint-Germain, Paris 6). That’s where I found my latest favorite, “L’alphabet des aveux” by Louise de Vilmorin and Jean Hugo. And then, in no particular order, the fresh and creamy tofu from Yen (22, Rue Saint-Benoît, Paris 6), the Delacroix Museum (6, Rue de Furstemberg, Paris 6), which also offers drawing classes for children in the garden, and finally Sennelier (3, Quai Voltaire Paris 6), the artists’ haven where you can find all the necessary materials… and the scribbled papers left behind by the Fine Arts students.

TSF

What are your favourite The Socialite Family pieces?

Constance

We love the Marta ceramic lamp in green, which I could easily see as a pair of bedside lamps against the green leafy wallpaper in our bedroom! And also the Letizia mirror paintings, to be placed one above the other for a kinetic effect.

I am very sensitive to materials: fabrics, slightly heavy curtains, and also to embodied interiors. This sense of opulent decor is something very French to me, a true heritage

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