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travel / travel magazine / winter 2007

WorldWide
Founded in 1542 by a Franciscan monk, San Miguel changed its name to San Miguel de Allende in 1826 to honour the memory of General Ignacio Allende, a hero of the war of independence from Spain. Its colonial-era architecture and its laid-back charms have attracted generations of artists from Canada and the United States.


Palette of San Miguel
By Patricia Pearson

What did my artist grandmother find so compelling about this small, colonial-era Mexican city?

It is dusk in the Mexican colonial city of San Miguel de Allende, on the high arid plain of Guanajuato, about four hours north of México City. I am lounging in an exquisite open-air living room on the roof of the Oasis, a newly refurbished 17th-century villa with four gorgeously appointed guest rooms. The breeze is soft, the sky is pale violet and fragrant with hibiscus and lilies, and all around me - above on the hillside and sweeping below the patio - are the pastel-hued Spanish-era homes and spired churches that have made this town so fabled for its charm.

MAP: STEVEN FICK/CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIC
Click map to enlarge
I have travelled throughout Mexico, but I had yet to visit this city, which was beloved by my grandmother, an artist who spent her winters here and was thus well positioned to assist my mother by driving down to the capital when I was born in Mexico City. As an adult, I had skipped San Miguel on various journeys, in part because I'd heard that it was a realm of Sandalistas, or utopian expatriate artists, who had headed south to reinvent themselves. Now, I am here to reconsider this prejudice. What had captivated my granny? Was it an allure that is still here, or something long gone, like the charm of Acapulco in the 1960s?



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My companion on the rooftop, photographer Russell Monk, introduced me to the Oasis when I arrived. He is a friend and neighbour of the owner, a writer originally from New York named Nancy Hooper. She and I stayed up past midnight on the day I checked in, reading from each other's works-in-progress while she periodically raided her kitchen for more Baja California wine. Her writing is urgent and arresting and true, and it struck me that this is likely the only time in my life that I will get tipsy and exchange painful family memories with the proprietor of an expensive hotel. This was my first hint that San Miguel's vision of reinvention might actually still mean something interesting.

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