Renaissance of the Gardens of Versailles
After violent storms destroyed thousands of trees in 1999, fears of disaster eased when the cleanup revealed panoramas unseen for centuries, fitting neatly into a 25-year restoration plan
- By Richard Covington
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2001, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 7)
Despite opening up the forest and leveling some aged trees, the storm left a stream of red ink in its wake, wreaking $16 million in damages to the château and $18 million in damages to the park. Miraculously, the wealth of antique statuary dotting the park escaped harm. "The trees were very polite," says Hubert Astier, president of the museum and park. "They fell beside the statues, not on top of them, except for one that had a leg broken off." Through the open window of his office we hear the incessant crunch of sneakers walking on pebbles, the signature chorus of Versailles’ ten million annual guests.
By far, the largest number of foreign visitors are American, drawn by the sumptuous extravagance of the palace and the historic connections between France and the United States that date back to the late 18th century when Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson were ambassadors to the French court. It was at Versailles that France committed itself to sending troops and arms to fight for the American Revolution and where the British signed the treaty ending that war. And it was at Versailles in 1919 that President Woodrow Wilson signed the treaty ending World War I.
Near and dear to American hearts
After the storm, Americans were among the first to volunteer their help. Of the 2,000 people paying to finance the planting of new trees under Astier’s adopt-a-tree program, 500 are American. American largesse dates back to 1924 when John D. Rockefeller, Jr., shocked by the dilapidated palace and gardens, donated nearly $1 million toward their restoration, and over the years, the Rockefeller family has injected another $23 million. Other Americans, as well as the Kress Foundation and the World Monuments Fund, have donated money and antiques. Recently, the American Friends of Versailles has raised more than half of the $3.5 million needed for restoration of the Bosquet des Trois Fontaines, one of 14 elaborate groves with fountains, statuary and topiary that Astier intends to restore in part with private funds.
Astier’s plans for Versailles are nearly as ambitious as those of Louis XIV, fueled by the government-mandated reacquisition of buildings and grounds that were once part of the prodigious royal domain. He envisions a research center devoted to European civilization in the 17th and 18th centuries and a school of equitation. Gérard Vié, the renowned chef of the local Michelin two-star Les Trois Marches restaurant, has been enlisted to open two new restaurants on the grounds. There’s even a plan to put small, motorized ferries in the Grand Canal to swan passengers the half-mile jaunt to Grand Trianon, though how they would maneuver among the rowboats and sculls already there is anybody’s guess. Astier is not worried. In Louis XIV’s day, the Grand Canal was jammed with gilt gondolas, a bark reserved for Jean-Baptiste Lully’s orchestra, and pint-size warships.
Before acquiring a taste for ruinous wars, the young Sun King certainly knew how to throw a party. Between 1661 and 1682, when the palace was largely a construction site, the gardens were a movable feast of plays by Molière, music by Lully, ballets with Louis dancing as a costumed Apollo, fountain shows and incomparable fireworks displays that painted the night sky with light. The whole symphonic concoction served as an immense, well-oiled propaganda machine. Underlying the dazzling revels, pleasure gardens and allegorical statuary was the unmistakable message of the king’s absolute power and glory.
History repeats itself in witty extravagance
True to Louis’ predilection for spectacles, Astier has opened up the palace and gardens to summertime extravaganzas. Les Fêtes de Nuit is an interpretation of the king’s passions for hunting, dancing and mistresses. This giddy charade features a costumed cast of 200 (most of them local amateur extras), hunters on horseback charging around the Bassin de Neptune with a pack of Irish hunting dogs, fountains that spew sparkling gushers of fire and others that send water sprays soaring 70 feet into the air. This wordless pageant is witty and delirious, with a crescendo of fireworks surpassing any I’ve ever seen.
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Comments (1)
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Posted by Covington restoration on February 8,2012 | 05:29 AM