After years spent living in cities, designer and writer Jason Mowen is now planning to divide his time between a weatherboard cottage in Murrurundi and a palazzo in Italy’s Puglia.
Jason Mowen waited until he was 45 to buy his first house. But this interior designer’s choice of a weatherboard cottage in the country four-and-half-hours north of Sydney was a surprise to many. “My friends thought I was crazy, but the more people told me not to do it, the more determined I became,” Jason says today, sitting in his elegant book-lined living room in Murrurundi, a NSW town famous for the thoroughbred studs dotted throughout the area.
The horse connection is an important one in this story. Based in Sydney’s inner-city Darlinghurst for a decade, Jason is the first to admit that on the surface his decision to opt for rural life was a surprising one, until you learn he grew up on a property in the rolling green hills around Maleny in Queensland.
“My mother and grandfather used to breed racehorses and I remember her speaking of Murrurundi when I was a kid. Then I went to university in Armidale in the early 90s and I always remembered this quaint little town with the long name that I used to drive through on my way to Sydney,” he explains.
“I drove through again in late 2015 and just fell in love with the place. It felt unspoiled: it wasn’t gentrified nor ruined with bad development. It was also really affordable and I loved that no-one back in Sydney had heard of it.”
On top of Jason’s lists of requirements was a place where his mother Jicky would also be happy to spend time. This meant any prospective new home needed to be in an area where this accomplished horsewoman’s beloved horses could be nearby — four of them are now on agistment in a nearby paddock — and so the search for a house began. Luckily, Jason was prepared to be patient because it was nearly a year before the right one came along.
“I was looking at both homes and land and after enquiring about another house, the local agent, Dave Bettington, told me: ‘Forget that one — have I got the house for you. Not on the market yet, but it’s perfect.” It took a while but 10 months later I was the proud owner of a largish cottage on an acre-and-a-half at the northern edge of town.”
Walking around the garden on a late afternoon, it’s easy to understand why, even though he had not originally planned to live in the property full time, Jason soon began to find it harder and harder to leave this quiet sanctuary with its abandoned tennis court and majestic pine trees soaring into the sky.
“In late 2019, I decided to give up the apartment I”d been renting for 10 years in Darlinghurst and move to the home I loved, and owned, in Murrurundi, as I felt I could do much of my work remotely,” he explains.
Built in 1905, the house is called Dovecot — a name Jason was originally puzzled by until he learnt more about its past. “There is no actual dovecot [a structure for housing doves or pigeons] so I couldn’t understand why it had been named that until I discovered it was built by a man named George Dove — so, house of the Dove — which I absolutely love. I bought the house from his granddaughter, Judy, who was born and lived all her life here. It has a really good energy. Judy was a lovely person, greatly esteemed in Murrurundi, and there was obviously a lot of love in this house over the years.”
Jason is gradually learning more and more about the history of Dovecot — just as he is with his holiday home in Italy. “Dovecot was my first house and then, just a few years later, I decided to buy a holiday place in Europe,” says Jason. After discovering how successfully he can work remotely from Murrurundi, he is hoping to spend three months a year at his second le casa — one half of a rustic palazzo dating back to 1580 — in Matino in Puglia.
“I see my life in the future, once things get back to normal, as living between Matino and Murrurundi. I”ve always been a bit of a gypsy and usually spend five to seven years in a place before moving on but I do love Murrurundi. It allows you to be quieter, which is great for inspiring both creativity and contentment. And being surrounded by such great beauty — the beauty of this wonderful old home and garden and the surrounding natural beauty of the mountains and landscape — I”ve lived all over the world and it just doesn’t get better than that.”
Five things I love to do in Murrurundi – and not in any particular order – are:
1. Lunch in the garden at Michael Reid’s gallery. “I love taking people there for lunch. The buildings, the ambience and the people – I love being there. Favourite thing on the menu? The pies are great.” Corner Boyd and Mayne streets, Murrurundi NSW. Telephone: (02) 6546 6767
2. A walk to Paradise Park. “If you walk up the hill and through these massive granite boulders and a crack in the cliff you will get a wonderful view of the town. It’s called the Eye of the Needle.”
3. Wander the town and admire the old colonial cottages and buildings dotted along the streets. “I’m always imagining what I”d do to them if they were mine!”
4. The suspension pedestrian bridge on Murulla Street, just before the intersection with Mayne Street. “When the river is running high, I love to cross this old bridge.”
5. “Sitting down on my verandah at the end of the day with a Magpie gin and tonic, listening to the cacophony of birds living in my garden and just losing myself in the view of the mountains beyond.
To see more of Jason Mowen’s work, go to jasonmowen.com and @jasonmowen on Instagram.
For information about La Dimora di Jason, see ladimoradijason.com and @ladimoradijason
Based these days in NSW’s Blue Mountains, the former editor-in-chief of Country Style and Vogue Living went home feeling very inspired after spending the day with Jason. “We loved so many of the same things and I admire how he has made this move to the country work for him.”
This Sydney photographer’s day job is the Special Projects Producer for Gritty Pretty magazine, but her other great passion is interiors. “Jason’s house was a dream to shoot, he has such a beautiful eye.”