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Iain McGarvie-Munn
Born
Iain McGarvie-Munn

(1949-12-24)December 24, 1949
Alma materKingston College, Ecole d'Architecture de Clermont-Ferrand
Occupation(s)Author, Museum Curator
Years active1974-
SpouseJuliet van Otteren

Iain McGarvie-Munn is an author and French historical site preservationist best known for his award-winning restoration of Le Château d’Entrecasteaux, an historical monument and one of the largest castles in France.[1]

Born in the United States, McGarvie-Munn lived in France for over twenty-five years, speaks several languages, and maintains citizenships in England and France as well as the United States. He is married to noted portrait photographer Juliet Van Otteren, with whom he collaborates on humanitarian projects.

Early Life and Education

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Iain McGarvie-Munn was born on December 24, 1949 in New York, NY to Hugh McGarvie-Munn and Carmen Ydígoras Laparra Atala. His father was a captain in the Seaforth Highlanders, an artist, and a naval architect. His mother was the daughter of María and General Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes.[2] When Fuentes became President of Guatemala in 1958, he appointed Hugh McGarvie-Munn to the post of Commander in Chief of his newly created Guatemalan Navy. The family to Guatemala and Iain lived in the Presidential Palace there until he was ten year old.[3]

File:Http://www.munnbooks.com/books/i-had-a-chateau-in-provence/01.jpg
Family

In 1960, as political tensions in Guatemala began to escalate, Iain was sent to study abroad at Box Hill School, the progressive co-educational boarding school in the south of England. In 1962, Iain's mother, Carmen Ydigoras de McGarvie-Munn was appointed Guatemala's ambassador to France (ref) and Iain spent summers and vacations living with her there.

After graduating from the Box Hill School, Iain did undergraduate work at Kingston College, majoring in Spanish literature.[4] When his grandfather's Presidency in Guatemala came to an end in 1963, Iain's father, Hugh, left Guatemala and joined Iain's mother in France. In 1969, Iain moved to France permanently and continued his college education at Ecole d'Architecture de Clermont-Ferrand, studying architecture.[5]

Career

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McGarvie-Munn began his career in 1969 as the Assistant Director of Restoration, Château de Veygoux, which was a 17th century stronghold of the Desaix family during the French Revolution. He began work on the project while still studying at the Ecole d'Architecture and continued working on it until 1974 when his father acquired and then moved the family into Chateau d'Entrecasteaux, one of the largest castles in France.

Originally an 11th century fortress, the Chateau d'Entrecasteaux had been transformed into a stately residence in the 17th century and, in the early 18th century became the residence of the Governor General of Provence, son in law of the Marquise de Sevigné. The castle had been abandoned and lay in ruins for close a century before the McGarvie-Munn family moved in.[2] Leveraging Iain's experience in restorations and Hugh's celebrity and connections, Iain and his father worked together on the project until Hugh's death in 1984.

Acting first as Director of Restoration and later as Executive Director/Curator, Iain gradually rebuilt the 31,000 sq. ft. castle, turning it into a popular historical site and tourist destination. From start to finish, the project took twenty-two years to complete.

Work as cultural ambassador

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As restoration work continued, McGarvie-Munn turned the Chateau d'Entrecasteaux into a cultural center, curating, producing and hosting a variety of exhibits and concerts which received the support of the French Ministry of Culture, as well as the consulates of countries such as Colombia, Denmark, Germany, Great Britain, Japan, the United States, and Guatemala (Iain's childhood home) which made Iain Honorary Vice-Consul to Marseilles in 1980. Art exhibits featured the works of such noted artists as Cecil Beaton, Man Ray, Conrad Felix Muller, Juliet van Otteren, Hans Hartung, Philippe d’Argencé, Helmut Newton, Henry Clarke, Jette Frolich, Ole Kortzau, among others. In 1982, McGarvie-Munn published a tourists' guide, Le Château d’Entrecasteaux, Port d’Attache d’un Grand Marin.

In 1983 he founded the “Stage Supérieur de Musique de Chambre d’Entrecasteaux”, a chamber music school known today as “Festival International de Musique de Chambre d’Entrecasteaux” and is attended by accomplished students from all over the world.

As the cultural center began to attract attention, McGarvie-Munn began to be recognized for his contribution to the cultural life and commerce in Ver and he became a delegate of La Demeure Historique, France’s Historic House Owners Association. Between 1982 and 1983, he founded two non-profit organizations: “Association des Amis du Château d’Entrecasteaux” (Friends of the Chateau) and “Route Historique des Haut Lieux de Provence” established to promote Var state’s most important Historical Monuments. Also serving as President for the first year, McGarvie-Munn created an historical 'Route' that takes tourists and visitors to over a dozen famous sites in Provence, including the Royal Convent and Basilica of St. Maximin, the Palace of the Counts of Provence in Brignoles, Vins castle, the Cistercian Abbey of Thoronet, château d’Entrecasteaux, the collegiate St. Martin of Lorgues, the Citadel of St. Tropez, Grimaud castle, the chapel of St. Roseline and the medieval lookout at Les Arcs-sur-Argens, the fortress of Balaguier at La Seyne, the collegiate St. Pierre of Six Fours, the St. Blaise Tower of Hyeres, the Beaumont Tower of Toulon, the Museum of Traditional Arts and Crafts in Draguignan. By 1991, his 'Route Historique' had increased tourism in the area by over half a million visitors per year.

Chosen in 1989 by the London Sunday Times as one of the ten best museums in France, Le Château d’Entrecasteaux's popularity as a tourist attraction prompted the publication of a revised bilingual edition of McGarvie-Munn's tourists' guide. His career as cultural ambassador continued into the early 1990's, culminating with an appearance as the keynote speaker at the convention of the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) in 1991.

Humanitarian projects

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In 1987, under the patronage of the French Minister of Culture and in collaboration with The Australian Academy of the Humanities and the Laboratoire d’Histoire Maritime at the Université de Paris-Sorbone, McGarvie-Munn produced the international colloquium “Voyaging Towards Australia”,[6] which was attended by historians from thirteen nations as a prelude to “Terra Australis to Australia”, the official historical colloquium of the Australian Bicentennial.

In 1990, working under the patronage of Dagpo Rimpoche, McGarvie-Munn produced the humanitarian exhibition “Le Tibet - Memoire d’un Peuple”, which inspired the “Fondation de l’Abbé Pierre” and many other doners to contribute a total of nearly eighty thousand US Dollars towards the building and upkeep of an orphanage and an old peoples home for Tibetan exiles in India.

Recent Work

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McGarvie-Munn met Juliet van Otteren, when he invited her to exhibit her photography at the cultural center at Chateau d'Entrecasteaux in 1987. They maintained a long-distance relationship for several years and, when the restoration of Chateau d'Entrecasteaux was complete, he offered to become her agent. He left France in 1991 to join her in Texas where she lived and worked at the time. They were married in Carmel, CA in 1996. He continues to represent her, and recently collaborated with her on her first book, “Heart of the horse,” a collection of her portraits published in 2004 by Barnes and Noble.

McGarvie-Munn began writing about his life in 2010, and his autobiography "I Had a Château in Provence" was published in 2015. His novel, "Freedom Bound, A Jessica Parker Adventure" was published in 2016 by Harper Collins.

Published works

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Non-fiction
  • Le Château d’Entrecasteaux, Port d’Attache d’un Grand Marin (revised bilingual edition), 1990
  • I Had a Château in Provence, 2015
Fiction
  • Freedom Bound, A Jessica Parker Adventure, 2016

Awards and honors

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  • Inducted into Who’s Who in America in 2003.
  • Médaille du Tourisme, French national medal of merit (tourism), 1995.
  • Grand Prix des Guides, Documents et Dépliants Touristiques, for the contents and design of the brochure he created for the Route Historique des Haut Lieux de Provence/Vins des Côtes de Provence, which was elected by the Ministry of Tourism and the association of French tourist offices, as the best tourist brochure in France, 1995.
  • Qualité Var Accueil, State award for tourism, 1994.
  • Diplôme d’honneur de l’Association des Vieilles Maisons Françaises, French Old Houses Association honorary diploma for outstanding service to the national architectural heritage, 1990.
  • Label du Meilleur Accueil dans les Musées et Monuments Historiques, National recognition for exceptional public service in historical monuments and museums, 1988.
  • Prix Marc de Beauvau-Craon, Historical Houses Association prize for restoration,
  • Obélisque du Conseil de l’Europe, European Council’s restoration award, 1980.
  • Prix de la Fondation Américaine de La Demeure Historique, American Foundation prize for restoration,
  • Prix des Chefs d’oeuvre en Péril, France’s most coveted prize for restoration (château d’Entrecasteaux), 1977.
  • Prix Vieilles Maisons Françaises, Old Houses Association prize for restoration (château de Veygoux), 1972.
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References

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  1. ^ "Château d'Entrecasteaux". Infotourisme.net. Society Tourisme Communication. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Hugh Ian Macgarvie-Munn". Biographies.net. Stands4 LLC. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  3. ^ McGarvie-Munn, Iain (2015). I Had a Château in Provence. United States: Munn Books. p. 346. ISBN 978-0692618240.
  4. ^ "Kingston College Kingston upon Thames, United Kingdom: Iain McGarvie-Munn". Alumnus.net. Alumnus Corp. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  5. ^ "Ecole d'Architecture de Clermont-Ferrand Clermont-Ferrand Area, France: Iain McGarvie-Munn". Alumnus.net. Alumnus Corp. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  6. ^ "Colloquium 'Voyaging towards Australia', Château d'Entrecasteaux, September 8–11, 1987 - Volume 11 Issue 2 - Ton Vermeulen". Cambridge.org. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 10 June 2019.