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 6 of 7)
While the restoration of the main palace gardens is starting to take shape around Le Nôtre’s original design, the Trianon area, including the Grand Trianon, the Petit Trianon and the queen’s Hamlet, will take far longer. "Since 80 percent of the trees were knocked down there, it could take more than a century for the woods to regrow," explains chief gardener Alain Baraton.
Here, at the Trianon, as in the palace gardens, the storm yielded a few unexpected benefits. In Marie Antoinette’s day, the queen could look down from her bedroom in the Petit Trianon across fields of wheat and oats to keep an eye on her mock farm and village in the Hamlet. But, according to Baraton, the 19th-century gardeners planted trees randomly and blocked this view. The storm obliged by knocking them down. "It will be the first time the garden has ever been replanted to look as it did in the time of Marie Antoinette," he says.
A decade before Marie Antoinette became queen in 1774, Louis XV had transformed the gardens around Petit Trianon into one of the most advanced botanical collections in Europe, with an elaborate hothouse sheltering 4,000 varieties of plants. Unfortunately, Marie Antoinette, not yet 19 years old when she became queen, had scant interest in botany and ordered the legendary collection of plants removed to the Jardin des Plantes in Paris and the hothouse dismantled. In its place, she constructed a heady variation on the Anglo-Chinese garden then in vogue, a romantic fantasy landscape replete with artificial grottoes, a river and a merry-go-round, the latest toy from China.
Taste in gardens, like political thought, had shifted radically since the Sun King and Le Nôtre laid out designs that illustrated man’s control over nature. Robert’s Bains d’ Apollon were a prime example. Under the influence of Rousseau, man was now intended not to master nature but to return to it. Absolutism—whether in taming subjects or nature—was on the wane.
In the late 18th century, there was a growing scientific curiosity about American animal and plant life, piqued in part by the Notes on Virginia written by the new ambassador to France, Thomas Jefferson. The king’s chief gardener was even dispatched to the New World to bring back native trees, some of which were flattened in the storm two centuries later. In a symbolic gesture, Baraton and Astier made a pilgrimage to the United States and brought back a Virginia tulip tree and a swamp cypress. They were planted on the first day of spring.
Marie Antoinette's charmed Hamlet
Despite the storm damage, the queen’s Hamlet is still a charmed place, dripping picturesque melancholy and set off by impressive stands of oak, sycamore and chestnut. Rolling meadows lead down to a lotus-covered lake bordered by a miniature half-timbered village. Restored in the 1930s, the village is an operetta set waiting for players. As in Marie Antoinette’s day, there is still a working farm with seasonal harvests of wheat and oats. Next to the thatched roof buhrstone barn, goats, geese, roosters, rabbits and smallish gray pigs bring life to a well-tended pen. Nearby fields are studded with hay rolls as tall as a man. Gone from the houses are the sumptuous interiors filled with gold, silk and marble that made such a joke of the artfully dilapidated exteriors. When the mob arrived to end the party on October 5, 1789, and force the royal family to Paris, Marie Antoinette was sitting in her grotto, lost in reverie.
"People still speak seriously of seeing the ghost of Marie Antoinette," muses Baraton, quick to add he’s never seen it. Instead of bestirring ghosts, the gardener intends to conjure up the perfumed air of the 18th-century gardens.
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Comments (1)
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Posted by Covington restoration on February 8,2012 | 05:29 AM