Time Out (Sydney)

Versailles: Treasures from the Palace

- Dee Jefferson SEE MORE OF CANBERRA TIMEOUT.COM/ SYDNEY

VERSAILLES: TREASURES FROM the

Palace at the NGA in Canberra is a testament to a time and place in which a world power put art and culture at the centre of its identity. The architect of the Versailles vision was Louis XIV, the self-styled ‘Sun King’. He transforme­d the palace into a flagship of architectu­re, design and art for all Europe. Poaching Flemish and Italian artists and artisans, and setting up workshops for tapestry (Gobelins), silk (Lyon) and ceramics (Rouen, Nevers), he made Versailles the model for the rest of Europe, and thus proclaimed a French apex of power – through culture.

“If there were no Versailles, world culture would be quite different,” says exhibition curator Lucina Ward.

As you make your way through the exhibition the cultural excellence remains in evidence (from the craftsmans­hip of furniture, to plans showing the sophistica­ted hydraulics for the gardens) but the story becomes one of changing social mores, and shifting power – not necessaril­y an overt narrative, but present in the hidden iconograph­ies and histories of objects and artworks. In paintings, look out for ladies drinking hot chocolate (a sign they want to be seen as à la mode) and drinking milk (a fetishisat­ion of the ‘simple’ peasant life that betrayed their ignorance of it); and the transition from the symmetrica­l and formal ‘French’ gardens, to the cultivated wildness of English ‘pastoral’ landscapes. Generally, portraits of the aristocrac­y depict them in more ‘informal’ poses and settings – the equivalent of the carefully cultivated ‘casual’ selfie.

In the objects and furniture on display we see a shift in materials from marble and painted surfaces of Louis XIV’s era to wood and soft furnishing­s under his successors, Louis XV and XVI. “They didn’t dare change the public or ceremonial spaces that Louis XIV had produced,” says Ward, “but they created private apartments that they could live in, which were cleverly hidden behind tapestries and parquetry. There was this transition towards a more intimate, private – and what we would think of as ‘modern’ – way of living.”

This was also central to the decline of the monarchy. Whereas Louis XIV had styled himself as a god (‘Sun King’ alluded to Apollo), and made himself constantly available to his subjects, his successors increasing­ly desired the freedom of private citizens – without relinquish­ing any of their power, privilege or assets. As France approached bankruptcy in 1788, this made them an easy target.

An epilogue of text deals with the revolution and ransacking of the palace, and the auctioning of many of its treasures. The exhibition ends, elliptical­ly, with Henri-Pierre Danloux’s 1795 painting of a well-heeled Louis XVI in the Temple tower, writing his last testament – with nothing but a mild look of despair to suggest the circumstan­ces leading to this point, and what was to follow.

 ??  ?? Installati­on view of Versailles: Treasures from the Palace exhibition at the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
Installati­on view of Versailles: Treasures from the Palace exhibition at the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
 ??  ?? After Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun ‘Queen MarieAntoi­nette’ 1779-80
After Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun ‘Queen MarieAntoi­nette’ 1779-80
 ??  ?? ‘Latona and Her Children’, 1668-70
‘Latona and Her Children’, 1668-70

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