Chez Pascal: A Frenchman’s Home is his Gallery -asianancientart.com

Posted on October 12, 2011 by

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A wooden mask from central Nepal — just one of the many  striking artifacts to be found in Butel’s residence http://www.time.com/time/travel/article/0,31542,2061126,00.html#ixzz1aYf4JrS5

As implausible as it sounds, one of Bangkok’s most stunning private  collections of antiques is located on a cul-de-sac approachable through the  city’s most notorious stretch of girlie bars. And this establishment comes with  the most personal of services: a guided tour from Pascal Butel, a transplanted  Frenchman who is one of Asia’s least known yet most devoted collectors.

He was practically born to the life. When he was 7, his grandmother in Nice  chose to bestow on him, from her brassiere, the keys to trunks of treasures  foraged from Indochina by her father. As a young man on a whimsical urge, Butel  made Thai his college major in Paris and afterward headed east. (See 10 things to do in Bangkok.)

These days, he lives in a house full of exceptional finds. While his bedroom  is off-limits, the rest of the place is packed with astounding objects: a  Himalayan shaman’s pouch made from a bear paw, a rare Isfahan carpet,  intricately carved Nepalese looms, striking totems from Nagaland, Javanese  chests. Butel waxes poetic about each object, discussing its provenance and uses  daily or divine. The trove, apparently, is a fraction of Butel’s main  collection, kept in France.

More than merely collecting, Butel sees himself as helping preserve  traditional “communities of interest and belief” and celebrating a time when  “the hand that shaped was directly connected to the heart.” Despite being able  to lecture like a professor about all he’s gathered, he also knows his own  limitations. “Just as a grandmother never tells you everything about her life,”  he says, “the best part of these objects is their mystery.

”my collections consists in top range world class statuary from 1st century B.C. to circa 17th century, all in outstanding condition.”

http://www.time.com/time/travel/article/0,31542,2061126,00.html#ixzz1aYeYl

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