Grand appartement du roi explained

The grand appartement du roi is the King's grand apartment of the Palace of Versailles.

As a result of Louis Le Vau's envelope of Louis XIII’s château, constructed as part of Louis XIV's second building campaign (1669–1672), the King and Queen had new apartments in the new addition, known at the time as the château neuf (new palace). The State Apartments, which are known respectively as the grand appartement du roi and the grand appartement de la reine, occupied the main or principal floor of the château neuf. Le Vau’s design for the state apartments closely followed Italian models of the day, as evidenced by the placement of the apartments on the next floor up from the ground level – the piano nobile – a convention the architect borrowed from 16th- and 17th-century Italian palace design.

Le Vau’s plan called for an enfilade of seven rooms, each dedicated to one of the then-known planets and their associated titular Roman deity. Le Vau’s plan was bold as he designed a heliocentric system that centered on the salon d’Apollon. The salon d’Apollon originally was designed as the King’s bedchamber, but served as a throne room.[1] The original arrangement of the enfilade of rooms was thus:

  1. Salon de Diane (Diana, Roman goddess of the hunt; associated with the Moon)[2]
  2. Salon de Mars (Mars, Roman god of war; associated with the planet Mars)
  3. Salon de Mercure (Mercury, Roman god of trade, commerce, and the Liberal Arts; associated with the planet Mercury)
  4. Salon d’Apollon (Apollo, Roman god of the Fine Arts; associated with the Sun)
  5. Salon de Jupiter (Jupiter, Roman god of law and order; associated with the planet Jupiter)
  6. Salon de Saturne (Saturn, Roman god of agriculture and harvest)
  7. Salon de Vénus (Venus, Roman goddess of love; associated with the planet Venus)

The configuration of the grand appartement du roi conformed to contemporary conventions in palace design.[3] However, owing to Louis XIV’s personal tastes[4] the grand appartement du roi was reserved for court functions — such as the thrice-weekly appartement evenings given by Louis XIV.

The rooms were decorated by Charles Le Brun and demonstrated Italian influences (Le Brun met and studied with the famed Tuscan artist Pietro da Cortona, whose decorative style of the Palazzo Pitti in Florence Le Brun adapted for use at Versailles[5]). The quadratura style of the ceilings evoke Cortona’s sale dei planeti at the Pitti, but Le Brun’s decorative scheme is more complex. In his 1674 publication about the grand appartement du roi, André Félibien described the scenes depicted in the coves of the ceilings of the rooms as allegories depicting the “heroic actions of the king.”[6] Accordingly, one finds scenes of the exploits of Augustus, Alexander the Great, and Cyrus the Great alluding to the deeds of Louis XIV. For example, in the salon d’Apollon, the cove painting “Augustus building the port of Misenum”[7] alludes to the construction of the port at La Rochelle; or, depicted in the south cove of the salon de Mercure is “Ptolemy II Philadelphus in his Library”, which alludes to Ptolemy’s construction of the Great Library of Alexandria and which accordingly serves as an allegory to Louis XIV’s expansion of the Bibliothèque du roi.[8] [9] Complementing the rooms’ decors were pieces of massive silver furniture. Regrettably, owing to the War of the League of Augsburg, in 1689 Louis XIV ordered all of this silver furniture to be sent to the mint, to be melted down to help defray the cost of the war.

LeVau’s original plan for the grand appartement du roi was short-lived. With the inauguration of the third building campaign (1678–1684), which suppressed the terrace linking the king and queen’s apartments and the salons of Jupiter, Saturn and Venus for the construction of the Hall of Mirrors, the configuration of the grand appartement du roi was altered. The decor of the salon de Jupiter was removed and reused in the decoration of the salle des gardes de la reine; and elements of the decoration of the first salon de Vénus, which opened onto the terrace, were reused in the salon de Vénus that we see today.[10]

From 1678 to the end of Louis XIV’s reign, the grand appartement du roi served as the venue for the King’s thrice-weekly evening receptions, known as les soirées de l’appartement. For these parties, the rooms assumed specific functions:

In the 18th century during the reign of Louis XV, the grand appartement du roi was expanded to include the salon de l’Abondance — formerly the entry vestibule of the petit appartement du roi — and the salon d’Hercule — occupying the tribune level of the former chapel of the château.

Bibliography

Primary source

Secondary source

Journal articles

Notes and References

  1. During the reign of Louis XIV (until 1689), a solid silver throne stood on a Persian carpet covered dais on the south wall of this room.
  2. This room originally served as the west landing of the Ambassadors’ Staircase and formed the main entrance to the grand appartement du roi.
  3. Baillie, Hugh Murray. "Etiquette and the Planning of State Apartments in Baroque Palaces," Archaeologia CI (1967): 169-199.
  4. and with the apartment’s northern exposure, Louis XIV found the rooms too cold and opted to live in the rooms previously occupied by his father.
  5. Campbell, Malcolm. Pietro da Cortona at the Pitti Palace. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1977.)
  6. André Félibien, Description sommaire du chasteau de Versailles, (Paris, 1674).
  7. Located in the western cove of the salon d’Apollon and painted by Charles de La Fosse ca. 1674.
  8. Located in the southern cove of the ceiling of the salon de Mercure and painted by Jean-Baptiste de Champaigne ca. 1674.
  9. For a more detailed discussion regarding the ceiling decor of the grand appartement du roi, see Gérard Sabatier, “Versailles, ou la figure du roi,” (Paris: Albin Michel, 1999). For an analysis of the symbolism in the decor of the grand appartement du roi, see Edward Lighthart, “Archétype et symbole dans le style Louis XIV versaillais: réflexions sur l’imago rex et l’imago patriae au début de l’époque moderne,” (Doctoral thesis, 1997).
  10. Originally, the room that is known today as the salon de Vénus formed part of the apartment of the King’s mistress, Madame de Montespan. Owing to her involvement with Affair of the Poisons, during which time it was alleged she had been giving the King love potions, she fell from grace in 1678 and her apartments were taken over by Louis XIV at which time the new salon de Vénus was installed.