From Marie Antoinette's Garden. An Eighteenth-Century Horticultural Album

Par : Elisabeth de Feydeau

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  • Nombre de pages240
  • PrésentationRelié
  • Poids1.83 kg
  • Dimensions24,7 cm × 31,7 cm × 2,6 cm
  • ISBN978-2-08-020142-3
  • EAN9782080201423
  • Date de parution03/09/2013
  • ÉditeurFlammarion
  • PréfacierCatherine Pégard

Résumé

"So you like flowers?" Louis XIV said to his young queen, "Well, I've got a bouquet for you–the Petit-Trianon." And so Marie Antoinette took over the splendid former residence of Madame de Pompadour, transforming the gardens into an enchanted landscape. Using archival documents and architect Richard Mique's original plans from 1777, Elisabeth de Feydeau recreates the fanciful herbarium, taking the reader on a journey through Marie Antoinette's estate.
The reader is invited to proceed from the French Gardens, with their beds of hyacinth, buttercups, and anemones, via the winding paths of the Anglo-Chinese Gardens, through the conifers of the Belvedere Gardens, where fabulous late night parties were hosted, and past the entrancing aromas of the shrubs surrounding the Temple of Love, to the wildflowers of the Garden of Solitude. Elisabeth de Feydeau's fascinating reconstruction plunges the reader into the eighteenth century, showcasing newlydiscovered species and the cosmetic uses of many of the garden's plants, alongside anecdotes from the royal court.
The volume is brought to life by delicate watercolors of the herbarium by Pierre-Joseph Redouté, a designer and painter for Marie Antoinette's Cabinet.
"So you like flowers?" Louis XIV said to his young queen, "Well, I've got a bouquet for you–the Petit-Trianon." And so Marie Antoinette took over the splendid former residence of Madame de Pompadour, transforming the gardens into an enchanted landscape. Using archival documents and architect Richard Mique's original plans from 1777, Elisabeth de Feydeau recreates the fanciful herbarium, taking the reader on a journey through Marie Antoinette's estate.
The reader is invited to proceed from the French Gardens, with their beds of hyacinth, buttercups, and anemones, via the winding paths of the Anglo-Chinese Gardens, through the conifers of the Belvedere Gardens, where fabulous late night parties were hosted, and past the entrancing aromas of the shrubs surrounding the Temple of Love, to the wildflowers of the Garden of Solitude. Elisabeth de Feydeau's fascinating reconstruction plunges the reader into the eighteenth century, showcasing newlydiscovered species and the cosmetic uses of many of the garden's plants, alongside anecdotes from the royal court.
The volume is brought to life by delicate watercolors of the herbarium by Pierre-Joseph Redouté, a designer and painter for Marie Antoinette's Cabinet.