From Italy to France: Gardens in the Court of Louis XIV and After

From Austria in the South, to Sweden and Russia in the North, French gardens became the model for garden design.
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Traité du Jardinage selon les Raisons de la Nature et de l'Art, Michel van Lochom  Flemish, Engraving and woodcut
Possibly by Michel van Lochom
Author Jacques Boyceau
Publisher Michel van Lochom
1638
Veue du chasteau de Versailles (View of Versailles, garden facade), Adam Perelle  French, Etching
Adam Perelle
Etched by Israel Silvestre
Publisher Nicolas Langlois
1680s
Le Bassin d'Apollon [The Fountain of Apollo, Versailles], Adam Perelle  French, Etching
Adam Perelle
Publisher Published by Nicolas Langlois
1680s
Nouveau Theatre de la Grande Bretagne: Ou Description Exacte des Palais de La Reine, et des Maisons les plus considerables...de la Grande Bretagne, Johannes Kip  Dutch, Illustrations: etching
Engraver Johannes Kip
After Leonard Knyff
Publisher David Mortier
1708
Landscape with Architecture, Isaac de Moucheron  Dutch, Pen and brown ink, brush and brown and black ink over traces of black chalk.
Isaac de Moucheron
n.d.
View of the side facade of the Palazzo Pamphili and its garden (Secondo prospetto per fianco del palazzo con diversa veduta del giardino del Bel respiro...Pamphilio), Simon Felice  Italian, Etching
Simon Felice
Publisher Published by Giovanni Giacomo De Rossi
after 1677
Settee (one of a pair) (part of a set), Johann Michael Bauer  German, born Westheim, Carved, painted and gilded linden wood; squab pillow in silk velvet (not original), German, Würzberg
Attributed to Johann Michael Bauer
ca. 1763–64
The Huis ten Bosch at The Hague and Its Formal Garden (View from the South), Jan van der Heyden  Dutch, Oil on wood
Jan van der Heyden
ca. 1668–70
Panoramic View of the Palace and Gardens of Versailles, John Vanderlyn  American, Oil on canvas, American
John Vanderlyn
1818–19
The Gardener from a set of the Italian Village Scenes, François Boucher  French, Wool, silk (21-23 warps per inch, 8-9 per cm.), French, Beauvais
Multiple artists/makers
designed 1734–36, woven 1762
The Swing, Hubert Robert  French, Oil on canvas
Hubert Robert
1777–79

The late sixteenth-century Italian garden with its monumental terraces, sculptures, and waterworks such as those at Villa d’Este and Villa Lante, was much admired and imitated in northern Europe, particularly in France (Saint-Germain-en-Laye). Recorded in detail in the print books by Giovanni Battista Falda, the expansive Italian estates near Rome, such as the Villa Doria Pamphilj ()]) and the Villa Aldobrandini at Frascati, would continue to be admired as an aesthetic ideal. By the 1630s, however, the epicenter of garden artistic activity had gravitated to the North, led by the French royal garden architects André Mollet and Jacques Boyceau de la Baraudiere. Each of these published treatises combined practical advice with new aesthetic concepts, adding models for novel “embroidered” boxwood and flowerbed ensembles called parterres de broderie ()(), including the celebrated parterres of the Jardin du Luxembourg () and the Tuileries in Paris. Mollet and Boyceau laid the groundwork for the supremacy of the French garden style under Louis XIV, culminating in the work of André Le Nôtre at Vaux-le-Vicomte (1660) and Versailles (1670–90) () () (). The basic elements of Le Nôtre’s design, later codified by Antoine Joseph Dézallier d’Argenville in La théorie et la pratique du jardinage (1709), consisted of a strongly unified composition, carefully balanced and proportioned for optimal visual effect. Centering on the palace and its dominating axis, a broad vista over the whole layout was offered, showing a hierarchical arrangement of parterres and waterworks within a grid plan, strictly lined by hedges and bosquets.

The Spread of the French Garden Style: The Anglo-Dutch Garden
From Austria (Belvedere in Vienna) in the South, to Sweden (Drottningholm) and Russia (Saint Petersburg) in the North, French gardens became the model for garden design, often necessitating the reworking of Le Nôtre’s principles to fit the peculiarities of the various sites. During the reign of William III of Orange and Mary (1688–1702), the so-called Anglo-Dutch garden evolved in England (Hampton Court; ()) and Holland (Het Loo). Using Le Nôtre’s principles, adapted to fit the local wet climate and level terrain, these gardens were prime examples of the current French international style, which also would define the layout of the early eighteenth-century English estates depicted in the Britannia Illustrata (1707).

The French Rococo—Garden-Park
In France, from the death of Louis XIV in 1715 onward, new gardening principles led to new forms of social leisure in increasingly asymmetrical, more intimate and randomly planted Rococo garden-parks. The models for these gardens were the dreamlike park-scenes by Antoine Watteau and François Boucher (), filled with colorful picnickers seated on grassy slopes among artificial ruins, whimsical pavilions, and playful fountains. Hubert Robert’s () park scenes with antique villas, obelisks, and aqueducts epitomize the vision of idyllic landscape, which became the central theme of eighteenth-century interior decoration (), ranging from restrained classical wall designs in the North, to flamboyant Rococo furnishings for an actual garden room () in southern Germany.


Contributors

Vanessa Bezemer Sellers
Independent Scholar

October 2003


Further Reading

Avery, Kevin J., and Peter L. Fodera. John Vanderlyn's Panoramic View of the Palace and Gardens of Versailles. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1988. See on MetPublications

Kisluk-Grosheide, Daniëlle O., Wolfram Koeppe, and William Rieder. European Furniture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art: Highlights of the Collection. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006.

Woodbridge, Kenneth. Princely Gardens: The Origins and Development of the French Formal Style. New York: Rizzoli, 1986.


Citation

View Citations

Sellers, Vanessa Bezemer. “From Italy to France: Gardens in the Court of Louis XIV and After.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/gard_2/hd_gard_2.htm (October 2003)