Roussillon, France | The Village That Bleeds Gold
Perched on a hilltop in the heart of the Luberon, Roussillon is a village that seems to have been conjured from the earth itself. Its buildings glow in shades of saffron, burnt sienna, and deep terracotta, painted not by artists but by the ochre-rich geology beneath the streets. This is one of the most vividly colored villages in all of France, a place where the landscape and the architecture blur into one continuous, glorious composition. The village has been inhabited since antiquity, but it was the industrial ochre mines of the 19th and early 20th centuries that gave Roussillon its enduring identity and flooded European art studios with pigment harvested from these very hillsides. Today the mines are quiet, the old trails are footpaths, and the light on a late afternoon in summer turns everything the color of warm honey.
A watercolor palette here leans hard into the earth: raw sienna and yellow ochre anchor everything, with accents of burnt orange and dusty rose pulled from the stone walls and tiled rooftops. Cooler notes of lavender grey and sage green arrive in the shadows of the valley and the scrubland below the village, giving the painter a full, sun-soaked range to work with.
