Название: Rococo
Автор: Victoria Charles
Издательство: Parkstone International Publishing
Жанр: Иностранные языки
Серия: Art of Century
isbn: 978-1-78310-390-4
isbn:
Strict classicism asserted itself in the external structure throughout the 18th century, although in the meantime, shortly after the death of Louis XIV and under the Regency of Philip II of Orleans (1674–1723), the Rococo style – consequently also called by the French the “Style Régence” – had emerged. Of course this new style was restricted almost exclusively to interior decoration and the arts and crafts, which was responsible for its more elegant furniture, accessories and wall-coverings. The ponderous ostentation of the Baroque ornamentation in sculptural embellishment and in its colourful appearance was made lighter and brighter, and any remaining straight line dissolved into sweeping scrolls.
By a carefully considered, well-planned division of the rooms, by each space’s connection with the others and by the ubiquitous ornamentation, the decorative style of the mouldings became distinctive. The corners of the mouldings were broken and curved. Into the spaces that this created, little ornaments or flowers were then inserted, and later the mouldings, too, were wrapped with leaves and flowers and the straight lines were transformed into curved lines. Alongside the flirtatious curves and dainty arcs, beside the constantly increasing revitalisation of the floral and tendril-shaped ornaments, the intentional avoidance of rigid symmetry was one of the most striking symbols of Rococo decoration.
Emmanuel Héré, Place Stanislas, 1751–1755. Nancy.
Jules Hardouin-Mansart, Grand Trianon, 1787–1788.
Domaine national du château de Versailles, Versailles.
The French architects formed two groups: one represented pure adherence to the classical style of building, the other had raised irregularity and flirtatiousness to a pitch. Each of these two directions laid claim to a particular territory. In exterior architecture the requirements of the first group were met; the ornamentation of the interior spaces presented the second group with the so-called architectural ornamentation, with a broad field of activity. This second group, using the widespread technique of copper etching, helped the new decorative style to reach predominance.
Integrated into this second group were the decorative artists. Amongst the most famous of these are Juste-Aurèle Meissonnier (1693–1750), Gilles-Marie Oppenord (1672–1742) and François de Cuvilliés (1698–1768), who had also been active in Munich. Their powers of invention and the richness of their imagination can be seen through their engravings and drawings. It also becomes clear here that Italian grotesque was the basis of French ornamentation. The ornamental artists also exerted a considerable influence on the other ornamentation of public buildings, particularly on the blacksmith’s work on balustrades, banisters and wrought iron gates.
The Architects
In French architecture in the 17th century, there was a counter-movement against the pompous, heavy Baroque style of Charles Le Brun (1619–1690), with a strict classicism that predominated in the extension of the Louvre by Claude Perrault (1613–1688). His main works as an architect are the eastern and southern external façades of the Louvre (the eastern side is the famous Colonnade). Perrault, in addition to his work as a doctor, was also a philologist and an art theoretician. He translated Vitruvius’s Ten Books about Architecture and wrote a system of column orders which lasted for many years.
However, an original French style of building was created only by the leading architect of the age, Jules Hardouin-Mansart (1646–1708), who at the young age of 30 was named Court Architect to his sovereign and invented the most effective decorative forms of the Baroque style with the structural rigidity of classicism. The sphere of his major work was in fact the Palace of Versailles with its chapel, royal chambers and the Grand Trianon, built for the last mistress and presumably secret wife of Louis XIV, the Marquise de Maintenon (1635–1719), and restored by Napoleon I (1769–1821), as well as the Orangerie. The most important of his artistic works is without a doubt the dome of Les Invalides (the former hospital in Paris for war veterans) completed in 1708, the cupola of which is a masterly combination of monumental effect and French elegance. Jules Hardouin-Mansart, in all of his works, created the foundations for the elegant decorative lines of the architecture and the ornamentation of the façades.
Jules Hardouin-Mansart, Orangerie, 1684–1686.
Domaine national du château de Versailles, Versailles.
Antoine Watteau, Fêtes Vénitiennes, 1718–1719.
Oil on canvas, 55.9 × 45.7 cm.
National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh.
Maurice-Quentin Delatour, Full-length Portrait of the Marquise of Pompadour, 1748–1755.
Pastel on gray-blue paper with gouache highlights, the face cut out and mounted on the paper, 177 × 130 cm.
Musée du Louvre, Paris.
Jean-Baptiste Perronneau, Madame de Sorquainville, 1749.
Oil on canvas, 101 × 81 cm.
Musée du Louvre, Paris.
But all was not purely restricted to Paris. For example in Strasbourg there was the Bishop’s Palace built by Joseph Massol (c. 1706–1771) from the plans of the “royal architect” Robert de Cotte (1656/57–1735), a brother-in-law of Hardouin-Mansart, the Hotel Rohan from Massol’s plans (1731–1742), the Hotel de Hanau-Lichtenberg (1730–1736), two houses for wealthy bourgeois families (1750–1751) and also the Jesuit College (1757–1759), planned by Le Mire and built by Massol. In Nancy the eye is taken by the wonderful Place Stanislas, named after a Polish king, the Place de la Carrière and the Place de l’Hermicycle, all built in the years between about 1750 and 1760. The complete entity of these three squares is preserved as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Painting
In the 18th century, the cold representation of the pictures of 17th-century designs gradually began to give way to a warmer conception, which developed further and further, manifesting itself ultimately in a frivolity of expression. The era of Jeanne Bécu, better known as Madame du Barry (1743–1793), who bled to death on the guillotine to the howls of the rowdy population, of Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson, famous as Madame de Pompadour, yearned for different attractions from those of the age of the official royal mistress, Madame de Montespan (1640–1707). This marquise did have seven children with King Louis XIV, but was forced out of court by Madame de Maintenon, who then after a long battle against bankruptcy became the last mistress and later secret wife of the then-aged and tired Louis XIV.
French art in the 18th century finally discovered its own language, in which it could fully communicate its essence. Painting with oils was an extensive process. Pastel painting, developed as early as the 15th century, is painting with dry colour crayons, the rubbings of which settle onto the paper, which is then made wipe-proof СКАЧАТЬ