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 5 of 7)
Louis was obsessed by his gardens, hovering over the minutest detail. He wrote at least six versions of a slim guidebook outlining precise instructions on the proper route for inspecting the gardens. Later editions changed the prescribed tour so that the elderly, gout-afflicted monarch could avoid steps. Louis wielded a mean set of shears, excelling in the arts of pruning and grafting. He delighted in taking foreign emissaries to his high-walled kitchen garden to astonish them with the dizzying array of exotic fruits and vegetables growing under newfangled greenhouses. Serving lettuce in January and strawberries in March provided yet another demonstration of the king’s power, proving that even the seasons bowed to his divine whim.
As willful and demanding as Louis was, he had the good sense to give the modest Le Nôtre a free hand in designing the gardens. When Le Nôtre was young, he was an apprentice to his gardener father, and helped create the Tuileries Gardens in Paris. Later, he oversaw the Luxembourg Gardens and Fontainebleau before Fouquet hired him for Vaux-le-Vicomte.
Le Nôtre was a genius at manipulating geometry and perspective, and he invented countless clever techniques for tricking the eye. While Versailles’ grand axes, expansive parterres and almost too-perfect proportions are the landscape architect’s signature pieces, it is in the hidden groves that Le Nôtre was truly inspired. Wandering along narrow paths, I stumble onto them by surprise. They are delightful, like living rooms of greenery inviting a visitor to sit and while away some time watching water spraying skyward, rippling down terraces or cascading over rocks.
For more than 20 years Le Nôtre was the uncontested master of the gardens, but gradually he was supplanted by Jules Hardouin-Mansart, a talented opportunist who slowly undid much of his teacher’s work. Mansart, says Lablaude, wanted a garden in marble. In wheedling Louis’ permission to destroy Le Nôtre’s Bosquet des Sources and erect the Colonnade Grove, Mansart got his wish; a stark circle of Carrara marble featuring François Girardon’s marble the "Rape of Persephone." The chiseled Colonnade made me pine for Le Nôtre’s antic greenery and jaunty fountains. When Louis asked Le Nôtre what he thought of the makeover, the normally reserved old gardener shot back an uncharacteristically impertinent zinger of a put-down: "Well Sire, what do you expect me to say? You have made a stonemason into a gardener and he has served you a dish of his own making." Touché!
Le Nôtre exacted his revenge with the Salle de Bal, a joyous amphitheater of water spilling over terraces with rock work and shells. This was his final work for Versailles. In the Sun King’s day, the royal family and the court gathered to watch dances performed on a platform island stage placed in the center of the grove. Le Nôtre was inspired, Lablaude later explains, after the old master returned from a trip to Rome, to incorporate fountains as magnificent as the Villa d’Este and an amphitheater suggested by the Colosseum into the Salle de Bal.
In search of the genius that was Le Nôtre
When I round the corner into the Bains d’Apollon I see the dramatic change in styles from the 17th century to the 18th. Le Nôtre’s ordered symmetry gives way to Romantic artist Hubert Robert’s theatrical creation for Louis XVI. Where nature was once trim and tidy, here it is released. Waterfalls tumble out of shadowed caverns, flowing over mossy boulders into a pond decorated with clumps of flowers and ferns. If Le Nôtre himself were to loaf and invite his soul on the shady lawn, I can picture him shaking his curly wig in loud lament: first Mansart rips out my beloved hedges and goes overboard with the marble; now this Robert lets nature run amok as if civilized Frenchmen were meant to live in the jungle. I can imagine the grizzled gardener itching to get his hands on some shears to snip away at the Baths’ confounded greenery.
Not me. It’s perfect as is.
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Comments (1)
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Posted by Covington restoration on February 8,2012 | 05:29 AM