Family

Sheltered by a Lush Garden, the Art and Cuisine Mansion of the Founder of Maison Joumana

Joumana Jacob

At

Joumana Jacob, Milos 15 and Macéo 12 years old

Free-thinking Joumana Jacob has the same independent taste for freedom as her mother, Lebanon’s first female criminologist and a feminist who was ahead of the times. She also has her father’s love of gathering around a large table and his ability to “grasp happiness wherever he was and to see beauty everywhere.” All this despite the suffering caused by the tragedy of war and exile. Growing up between Beirut and Paris, Maison Joumana’s founder learned how to make the most of life from an early age. And to live every moment to the full! Boosted by all good things, she draws inspiration from “experiences that touch me, bring out my emotions, do me good,” — a philosophy that prompted her to develop her two main interests in the heart of a Bordeaux mansion., The starting point of an adventure that combines art and cuisine, largely influenced by Lebanese hospitality. Sheltered by a lush garden, this building – where she lives with her two sons and receives her guests – immediately felt like “being in an old house”. An ideal location to recreate “the family home she never had in Beirut”, filled with a plethora of objects from the past and a meeting place for a “happy medley” of artists, friends and curious minds. A happy buzz the former teacher intends to continue to build and develop…elsewhere! Maison Joumana isn’t about being glued to one place, and there are plenty of other cities where this happiness will be reproduced. Paris is first on the list, after a very recent trip to the neighbourhood of Pigalle. New horizons featuring dishes inspired by “seasons, Lebanese, Mediterranean and other cuisines” to be accompanied by laughter and great vintages to celebrate the arrival of sunny weather. A true “live for the moment” philosophy!

Location

Bordeaux

Table de salle à manger en bois Joumana Jacob à Bordeaux

TSF

  • Joumana, could you introduce yourself, please?

Joumana

Introducing yourself is quite a complex exercise! I love life. Celebrating it at every moment, dipping my hands in flour, sitting around a table with friends, wine, people, art in all its forms, laughing, loving. I established Maison Joumana in 2020 in Bordeaux. It’s a place that combines art and cuisine with a good, strong dose of Lebanese hospitality.

TSF

  • Tell us about your education. What sort of environment did you grow up in – and how did you develop your taste?

Joumana

I grew up between Beirut and Paris with an epicurean father who loved to party and entertain friends over good food and good wine. My childhood was punctuated by the laughter of friends and the clink of glasses despite the suffering and drama of war and exile. He was an art lover, sensitive to what we call beauty, but above all, he passed on to me this ability to grasp happiness in every corner where it could be found and to see beauty everywhere. My mother, following the war, was more downbeat. With her, I learnt to face and look at the darker side of us and to tame it. She was the first female criminologist in Lebanon and defended women’s rights. She was an early feminist. It was from her that I inherited my independence of spirit and my taste for freedom. I enjoy surrounding myself with beauty. Furniture, paintings, for example… But what touches me the most is the beauty I perceive in the people around me. I also marvel at the beauty of fruit and vegetables, which is why I love to cook them. The beautiful and the good have always been associated with a form of happiness. So my life revolves around these two axes!

Buffet bois chez Joumana Jacob à Bordeaux

TSF

  • Why did you choose this new profession, which is so far removed from being a teacher?

Joumana

This job seems new from a professional point of view, but it’s what I have always done. So it’s actually more about continuity than novelty. I have always cooked for large gatherings, loved to entertain, welcome and share. Among these friends, there are some artists whose work touches me. This led me to establish Maison Joumana to link everything together so that I could devote my days and not just my evenings to it.

TSF

  • Tell us how you came across the mansion where you have established yourself.

Joumana

It was a truly magical encounter! I was charmed immediately by this building; it gave me the impression of being in an old Beirut house. I immediately wanted to write part of its story. The ancient interior doors and the lush garden seemed immediately familiar. Just like a bird’s nest, I don’t think a house is necessarily home forever; I’m just passing through. We build something, we grow in one way or another, and we move on to new horizons. I’ve lived in many places, starting with a studio and then a small flat in Bagnolet. After that, I kept moving. I enjoyed refurbishing these spaces, giving them a new lease of life, staying for a while, feeling good there, and then leaving to start another project.

TSF

  • This building welcomes gourmets and artists for meals, workshops and residencies. How did you develop this unique concept where two different worlds come together?

Joumana

These are two worlds that appeal to me, that bring me joy, that make me feel good. As instinct and emotion guide my life, I naturally wanted to combine these two worlds. It was obvious. So I gathered everything together around the kitchen – life! – and the table, a pretext for meeting the artists who inspire me. Lamia Ziade, a great Lebanese artist, created the logo, and I hope to share other adventures with her. Virginie Clavereau, whose emotional approach thrills me, not only exhibited but also did a residency and a performance. We are continuing to work together on future projects. Ryoko Sekiguchi, whose writing I admire, came to present her book on Beirut, and we organised a Lebanon Japan meal. New adventures will follow with other friends, including Hanna Benmeyer, the graphic designer and ceramist, Tracy Zeidan, a truly multi-talented woman who is also an architect, scenographer and graphic designer, Arnold d’Alger….. and many others, I hope!

I was immediately charmed by this building, which gave me the impression of being in an old Beirut house (...) The old interior doors and the lush garden immediately seemed familiar to me.

TSF

You literally welcome people into your home. What does this change, cause, make concrete in your relationship with others?

Joumana

It’s hard to say because I don’t feel any boundaries, and it doesn’t change anything for me in my relationship with others. You’ll have to ask the people who come (laughs). For me, intimacy is something else. And if it had to be characterised by a place, it would be my bedroom… And at the moment, I don’t receive guests there (smile), well, maybe, but that’s another story (laughs). I’ve always welcomed people into my home, and it’s not a restaurant or open to the street. Meals, meetings with artists and exhibitions can be arranged on a private basis. You have to book beforehand, so ultimately, that’s where the boundary lies. It’s like, for example, Arnold D’Alger from the bazar d’alger (which I love!). He welcomes people into his home for workshops without thinking twice about it. My children were used to having people in the house all the time, so it wasn’t a big change for them either.

TSF

  • Your living rooms are characterised by their rich, eclectic style. How did you furnish your home?

Joumana

It’s eclectic because it wasn’t consciously planned to be beautiful or to fit together, but to respond to my emotions. For this house, where I settled after a long trip to Lebanon, during which I lost my brother and my mother, I wanted to recreate the family home atmosphere that we could never have in Beirut. So I mixed furniture that belonged to my parents with other antique or vintage pieces I found. There are also some things I keep as time goes by. There is a happy melancholic atmosphere, I think.. I like to be surrounded by objects from the past; it allows me to be more in the present moment: the objects carry this history and this trace, and my head can then download it. Although the traces of my past may disappear from my eyes, they remain firmly embedded in my thoughts. Despite appearances, this isn’t a way of being focused on the past but rather my way of accepting it and being here now.

TSF

  • Which is your favourite room or space?

Joumana

Each room is my favourite, depending on the time of day or my state of mind.

TSF

  • What addresses would you spontaneously recommend to us in Bordeaux?

Joumana

For a pleasant stroll, the Museum of Contemporary Art, the Puces de St Michel flea market and the Chartrons district. For a meal, Symbiose, Bibi, au bon jaja, or soif. To eat, buy and drink wine, le flacon st Michel, which also hosts excellent chefs in residence. And out of season, go for a walk along the basin or the ocean at Le Ferret.

TSF

  • Where will we find you in the coming months?

Joumana

In Paris! And if the context allows it, in London, Athens and Beirut of course (we have to start dreaming, don’t we?)

TSF

  • What does The Socialite Family mean to you?

Joumana

Keeping up with what’s going on, inspiration, a desire to move forward!

Miroirs Joumana Jacob Bordeaux
Chambre d'enfant Joumana Jacob à Bordeaux
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