Apr
08
2010
0

A Generation of Women Dedicated to Producing Outstanding Wines

There are some 20 gifted, talented and hard working women wine growers currently leading many of France’s major vineyards. Representing many different wine-producing regions, they are all committed to combine their hopes and hard work to promote their land, their vineyard and their wine. Pioneering and passionate, they are now actively cooperating in the promotion of the Languedoc Roussillon’s “Nouvelle Frontiere” wine growing designation.
Vinifille_1_W_4627
Women, mothers and wives, they seek to preserve shared values with determination and to confront detractors who unfairly demonize their wines. They aim to find together the means to earn a new critical judgment about this region. All the women engaged in wine producing in this area are proud of their achievement in the field. Beautiful, rebellious, dynamic, and proud to produce the pleasures of the table, all are partners in the new association of women winegrowers, known as “VINIFILLES.”

In short, they seek to share their know-how, develop genuine self-help wine production, preserve their lands, protect the environment, and share their own experiences in producing fine wine.
contact@vinifilles.fr – www.vinifilles.fr

Written by janicekaplan in: Uncategorized | Tags: , ,
Jan
04
2010
0

Wine Woman Hall of Fame: Empress Josephine’s 13,000 bottle cellar on exhibit.

Empress Jos insertan insert from: “Le Banquet des souverains Tilsit Musee Carnavalet- Histoire de Paris, France” Gravure en couleur d’apres Swebach – Jacques Desfontaines, H.38.5 x L 42.4 cm/Musee Carnavalet/Roger Viollet

The Contents of Empress Josephine’s wine cellar is on exhibition in 2010. She sure knew how to throw a party. From the best crus in Bordeaux and Burgundy to rum and liqueurs from the West Indies, her inventory was striking in its range and variety. The evolution of wine production and marketing during the Empire also reveals the progress in the glassmaking industry. Elegant ice buckets, glass coolers, crystal and metal punch bowls illustrate the refinement and prestige of the tableware at Malmaison and stand alongside the most brilliant pieces of glassware, some bearing the monograms of the sovereigns from Josephine to Louis-Philippe.

The exhibition brings together more than two hundred objets d’art and iconographic documents not only from the Musée de Malmaison but from the collections of the museums of the Château de Fontainebleau, the Château de Compiègne, the Château d’Eu (Musée Louis-Philippe), the Musée Carnavalet, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, the Musée National de Céramique de Sèvres, the Archives Nationales, the Fondation Napoléon, the musée Napoléon Thurgovie, château et parc d’Arenenberg, (canton of Thurgovia, Switzerland) and the Museo Napoleonico, Rome. Other items are on loan from industrial or commercial firms such as Moët et Chandon, or from private collections. Taking an artistic and historical angle, the exhibition shows that Josephine’s cellar is a precious testimony to the gracious entertaining which long made the charm and reputation of Malmaison.

This exhibition will be shown at the musée Napoléon Thurgovie, château et parc d’Arenenberg, in Salenstein, Switzerland, from 10 April to 10 October 2010, then at the Museo Napoleonico in Rome, from October 2010 to 28 February 2011.

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