A sculptor's spectacularly creative farmhouse in Mallorca

Deep inside a protected nature reserve on Mallorca’s northern coastline, the American sculptor Michael Prentice has spent decades building an enchanting retreat.
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Elliot Sheppard
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Elliot Sheppard

Today, the house is approached via a long private drive that culminates in a gently winding path ascending to the front door. The path intersects two cultivated terraces – traditional to Mallorca – the upper one populated by dome-shaped topiary bushes, sheltered by a giant ancient olive tree, the lower flanked by a row of Cypress trees, behind which an olive grove slopes towards the sea. The rest of the four acres are given to productive olive and citrus trees, as well as vegetable patches and a seawater pool with outdoor living space.

If the grounds are pure Mediterranean country house playbook, the interiors veer delightfully away from expectations and are the result of Prentice’s organic creative process, led by his far-ranging sources of inspiration and give-it-a-go spirit. The kitchen, for example, features walls painted by long-term collaborator Jacob Kapica – in designs inspired by African mud patterns – a large-scale mosaic modelled on one in Tunis’ Bardo National Museum, as well as 19th-century Mallorcan decorative tiles. The hallway adjacent to the kitchen, meanwhile, is decorated in a pattern inspired by a motif found in a book about Pompeii given to Prentice by his mother.

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The Japanese bedroom is decorated in gold leaf and a custom mural painted by Prentice’s long-term collaborator, Jacob Kapica

Elliot Sheppard

While most of the six bedrooms are seductive in their rustic simplicity, furnished with antique Mallorcan furniture – ‘found on the street,’ says Prentice – as well pieces from Kerala, where he once spent two and a half years making work. The so-called Japanese bedroom is a delightful folly; ‘I’m a monkey in the Japanese zodiac, so the monkey in the tree is me!” says Prentice with typical humour. ‘Jacob was really into Japanese art, so I let him go all-out, and he really went for it,’ he says.

At almost 80, Prentice is no longer making work but instead fills his time between investing in medical start-ups and running Alta Arts, an arts foundation in Houston, Texas, he established in 2020. He makes it to Mallorca twice a year, once in July and then in October for the estate’s olive oil harvest, renting out the house the rest of the time. A luxury, no doubt, but it seems like Prentice hasn’t fully shaken off his original intentions for something simpler: “I have a friend who lives in Bangkok who loves fabric, and she wants to create a kind of tent down by the pool. I think it’d be fun to have a sort of sleeping space out there,” he says.