18th Century Collecting Art
18th Century Collecting Art
18th Century Collecting Art
Essay
In 1661, both the taste of the young monarch and prevailing artistic style had
already been shaped by the creative fervor of the 1650s. When Louis was
anointed king at Reims in 1654, the then-predominant fashion in Paris was the
Italian Baroque , so enthusiastically promoted by Cardinal Mazarin (1602–
1661), prime minister and godfather to Louis. Italian painters such as Giovanni
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Italian Baroque forms had also seduced French designers and engravers .
Foremost among them was Jean Le Pautre (1618–1682), who engraved and
gathered in ornament books his exuberantly decorative fantasies, often
inspired by the Roman and Florentine painted and stuccoed ensembles of
Pietro da Cortona (1596–1669). Le Pautre’s prints were meant to spread the
new style and stimulate the imagination of sculptors and decorators, not only
in Paris but also in the provinces ( 56.234.34 ). The love of Italian Baroque
decoration was inseparable from that of Italian ballet and musical comedy .
Thus, Mazarin saw to it that the young king was lavishly entertained by Italian
musicians and singers, while Gasparo Vigarani, the brilliant theatrical
engineer whom he had imported in 1659 from the Este court at Modena,
designed astonishingly ingenious stage sets and machinery.
Among the Parisian painters, a new star had risen with Charles Le Brun (1619–
1690). Le Brun, who had studied in Italy for four years, showed an
extraordinary talent for painting and also for creating decorative ensembles
that integrated architecture, painting, and sculpture with a sense of style both
sumptuous and alluring. Le Brun’s most brilliant work before 1661 was the
decoration of Vaux-le-Vicomte, the splendid château built by the architect
Louis Le Vau (1612–1670) for the ill-fated superintendent of finance Nicolas
Fouquet. After Louis XIV assumed the reins of power and, a few months later,
had Fouquet arrested and tried, replacing him with Colbert, the wheel of
fortune turned toward Le Brun. His versatile talents as a painter and
draftsman and his instinct for decoration destined Le Brun to become, and
remain for the next twenty-five years, the principal creator and orchestrator
of the court style of the Sun King.
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Colbert, whose zeal for the glory of the king and the welfare of France rapidly
put into motion the most efficient administrative state machinery the country
had ever seen, was quick to recognize the value of Le Brun’s gifts as an artistic
director. Soon after Louis XIV named him premier peintre du roi in 1662
and turned to him to create the decoration of the Galerie d’Apollon at the
Louvre, Colbert put him in charge of the sprawling complex of artists’
workshops that he had gathered, under the name of Manufacture Royale des
Meubles de la Couronne, at the Hotel des Gobelins on the left bank of the
Seine in Paris. Here, working together, were some 250 French as well as
Italian, Flemish, and Dutch artists and craftsmen—painters and tapestry
weavers , sculptors and cabinetmakers, silversmiths and metalworkers,
mosaicists and embroiderers—hired for the sole purpose of creating the lavish
furnishings needed to embellish the king’s residences. As director of the
Manufacture Royale, Le Brun supplied sketches and approved models for all
of its products, inspiring and harmonizing the works of painters like Adam
Frans van der Meulen, Jean-Baptiste Monnoyer, and René Antoine Houasse;
sculptors and cabinetmakers like Philippe Caffiéri and Domenico Cucci; and
goldsmiths and engravers like Alexis Loir. Le Brun’s success was complete. In
a famous tapestry of his design depicting the visit of Louis XIV to the Gobelins
(Mobilier National, Paris), we see Le Brun on the left, hat in hand to receive
the king, who is accompanied by Colbert. Le Brun shows the glorious
products of his establishment: in the foreground, some of the silversmiths
present massive silver vases and a richly sculptured silver brazier; in the
center, the ébéniste Pierre Gole watches over two attendants who carefully
bring in a small table decorated with delicate ivory inlays ; behind Gole, a
mosaicist (perhaps Fernando Megliorini) holds aloft a table of pietre dure
mosaic; while, on the right, Cucci and Caffiéri put the finishing touches on an
elaborately carved two-tier cabinet.
At Versailles, the young Louis XIV could also indulge in his personal dream
world. It was a world haunted by the memory of the elaborate and exotic
furnishings assembled at the Louvre by his mother and of the Italian operas
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A small bronze relief designed in 1672 ( 25.142.61 ), the year the city of Paris
conferred on Louis the title of Magnus (Great), conveys the mood of these
happy years. Shown as the Sun King, he wears a fanciful helmet crowned with
the chariot of Apollo that drags in triumph a chained prisoner—a symbol of the
German towns captured by Louis XIV’s armies during the first of his
victorious campaigns against the Dutch in 1672. The helmet and the armor ,
embossed with a wealth of allegorical details, may well have been worn by the
king at one of the fêtes at Versailles. It is a fairy-tale image of a fairy-tale
prince, the way Louis XIV wanted to appear to his subjects and to the whole of
Europe in the mid-1670s and during the ten years of peace and prosperity that
began with the Peace of Nijmegen in 1678.
By the time the Galerie des Glaces was completed, Colbert was dead. He was
succeeded by the marquis de Louvois (1641–1691), and a new generation of
architects and designers was now ready to interpret the sovereign’s wishes. In
1678, Jules Hardouin Mansart (1646–1708) had been named by Louis XIV as
architect of Versailles, and it was he who transformed the château into the
permanent royal residence, the seat of the court, and the center of the French
government ( 30.22[22.64] ). In 1688, as Mansart set out to enlarge Versailles,
to design new living quarters for the king and for the Grand Dauphin and his
family, and to build a royal retreat at Trianon, the Holy Roman Emperor
Leopold I and the League of Augsburg declared war on France. While the
conflict raged for nine years at the borders of France, severely straining all the
resources of the nation, royal construction came to a halt, the Gobelins was
closed and its artists disbanded. Only after the Peace of Ryswick in 1697 did
the Manufacture Royale reopen, this time housing only the tapestry weavers.
Since 1680, Jean Berain (1640–1711) had been entrusted with the drawings for
costumes, stage sets, and royal ceremonies at the Académie Royale de
Musique, where the post of director had been bestowed upon the Florentine
Jean-Baptiste Lully. Although Berain had never been to Rome, his talent for
inventing and drawing beguiling theatrical costumes, enchanting opera sets,
and fanciful banquets gained him the post of dessinateur de la chambre et
du cabinet du roi in 1674. His imagination, first stirred by the ornamental
vocabulary of Le Pautre and Le Brun, had magically transformed their opulent
formal inventions into lighthearted and witty fantasies. Elaborating on the
grotesques that Raphael had borrowed from the vaults of the Golden House of
Nero and adapted for the stucco decorations of the Vatican Logge, Berain
introduced into them a population of dancers and acrobats, impertinent
monkeys, and riotous satyrs—the children of his own theatrical world. In these
designs, soon to be multiplied by means of engravings ( 21.36.141 ), the antics of
Berain’s little actors were restrained by delicate filaments and an elegant yet
rigidly disciplined structure of seventeenth-century ornamental motifs.
in the closing years of the seventeenth century as those of Le Brun had been in
the heyday of Louis XIV’s reign. They were adopted by the king’s favorite
ébéniste, André Charles Boulle (1642–1732), and by the textile and tapestry
weavers now employed not only by the king but also by the Grand Dauphin,
the princes, and the envoys from foreign courts: for their more relaxed,
carefree lightness and wit seemed to bring a breath of fresh air.
Although the intellectual and artistic ferment that united artists and poets,
musicians and scientists around the various academies of arts and sciences, as
telescoped in a famous print by Sébastien Le Clerc ( 62.598.300 ), continued to
add to the brilliance of Louis XIV’s court, the old monarch became tired of
Versailles and the stiffness and solemnity of its official life. Saddened by the
War of the Spanish Succession (1701–14) and by the many deaths in his
immediate family, Louis XIV yearned in his last years for a simpler lifestyle.
As a new sensibility—more lyrical, more French, and, above all, more
spontaneous—appeared in the designs for tapestries, furnishings , and
costumes sketched by Berain’s younger competitor, the painter Claude III
Audran (1658–1734), and in the small collectors’ bronzes by sculptors like
Corneille van Cleve (1645–1732) and Robert Le Lorrain (1666–1743) ( 1973.263 ),
the decorative style of Louis XIV’s long reign moved imperceptibly into that of
the oncoming Regency.
Olga Raggio
Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
August 2009
Citation
Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts. Based on original work by Olga
Raggio. “French Decorative Arts during the Reign of Louis XIV (1654–1715).” In Heilbrunn
Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–.
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/frde/hd_frde.htm (August 2009)
Further Reading
Parker, James, Alice M. Zrebiec, Jessie McNab, Clare Le Corbeiller, and Clare Vincent.
"French Decorative Arts during the Reign of Louis XIV 1654–1715." Metropolitan Museum of
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