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Visiting Collioure, France: A perfect travel plan

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Deborah Bine

The Barefoot Blogger

Visiting Collioure, France, was a great way to reconnect with the Mediterranean after spending three months with family and friends in the US. I took the scenic route back to France, traveling from Barcelona to Collioure. While sitting at the beach, enjoying the stunning views, the gentle breeze, and an Aperol Spritz at a seafront cafรฉ, I realized it was the perfect travel plan.

perfect travel route

The Perfect Travel Plan: Choosing Collioure

It’s somewhat surprising that so few non-French know about Collioure. It’s packed with French couples and families, so it’s their secret. Shhhh… don’t tell.

perfect travel plan

A City of Special Light

My visit to Collioure was without an agenda. I wanted to soak up the “light” that draws many to the seaside town.

Some of the most brilliant artists spent time in Collioure “following the light.” Among them, Henri Matisse and Andrรจ Derain. During their time here, they captured every angle of Collioure on canvas.

Because the beautiful city is set between the Mediterranean Sea and the Pyrenees mountains on the only east-facing coast of France, Collioure experiences exceptionally long hours of sunshine. Also, the Mediterranean has almost no tides. So when the sun rises over the water, there is no surf to break the sun’s reflection off the sea, nor to diminish the green and red colors of the Pyrenees.

“Collioure has no shadows.” Andre Derain

The light exposure, natural scenery, and historical monuments drew Paul Signac, Matisse, Derain, Chagall, Dali, Picasso, and hundreds of others to Collioure. In fact, it is here that Matisse experimented with colors. Collioure is the “birthplace of Fauvism,” the 20th-century art movement led by Matisse that liberated the concept of color. He introduced vibrant colors and vigorous brushstrokes in a way never seen before.

“When I put a green,” Matisse would say, “it is not grass. When I put a blue, it is not the sky.” Matisse saw color as a tool to “interpret nature and submit it to the spirit of the picture,” he said.

A City of Artistsย 

Collioure continues to host artists from all backgrounds. More than 40 art galleries and a Museum of Modern Art are active with hundreds of exhibitions. Visitors can tour along a trail in the village where famous Fauvist works were painted or drawn.ย 

โ€œIl nโ€™y a pas en France de ciel plus bleu que celui de Collioure… Je nโ€™ai quโ€™ร  fermer les volets de ma chambre et jโ€™ai toutes les couleurs de la Mรฉditerranรฉe chez moi.โ€ Henri Matisse

It’s all about the light.

 

The Perfect Travel Plan: Exploring Collioure

Because I visited Collioure as a wandering tourist, not as a travel writer,ย  I wanted to get into the “moment” if I was going to make this the perfect travel plan. I looked forward to walking, reading local guidebooks, and going with the flow.

Here are sights in Collioure you literally can’t miss

Notre-Dame-des-Anges, Our Lady of Angels, stands on the outcrop of rocks as in 1693. The symbol of Collioure, the baroque pink dome carved by Catalan sculptor Joseph Sunyer, was added in 1810.

perfect travel route

 

Chรขteau Royal is across the bay. The Knights Templar built the castle around 1207. The Kings of Majorca built a second castle by the 13th century. In the 16th century, after a brief occupation by Louis XI, the Spanish occupied Collioure again and turned the castle into a modern fortress. Franceย annexed Roussillon and Collioure in 1659.ย  The castle has been in French hands since that time.ย 

perfect travel route

 

The history of Fort Saint-Elme began in the eighth century as a watchtower. The French troops of King Louis XIII took the fort after signing the Treaty of the Pyrenees and adapted it for artillery, and it was a defense site through the French Revolution. During WWII, the Kriegsmarine occupied Fort Saint-Elme. They destroyed parts of the structure upon their escape from the Allies. It is now a museum.ย 

 

Le Moulin de Collioure, the oldest windmill in Roussillon, has been converted from a cereal mill to an olive mill.

Windmill (left) and Fort Saint-Elmo

Bites in Collioure that are so good

When I’m in the States, I miss French food. So, my first stop in Collioure was at dinnertimeLWhat a great find!ย 

Next: Reminiscing in Barcelona

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