Rodama: a blog of 18th-century & Revolutionary France

Saturday, 30 October 2021

Laborde - Life and death of a financier

Monsieur de Laborde, you will perhaps be astonished that, without the honour of knowing you, I have come to ask you to lend me 100 louis? - Monsieur, replied Laborde laughing, you will be even more astonished  to learn that, knowing you, I am prepared to lend them to you.
Quoted Janzé, Les financiers d'autrefois (1886), p.268.

I am remaining in France.  I have never done any harm to anyone. 
Letter from Laborde, received by Élisabeth Vigée Lebrun during her exile in Rome in 1789-90; quoted in her memoirs. 


Laborde by Alexander Roslin,
Cover image from the biography by Jean-Pierre Thomas & François d'Ormesson

Here are a few more notes on the owner of La Ferté and Méréville.  A  new scholarly biography of Laborde by François d'Ormesson and Jean-Pierre appeared in 2001, reissued this year.  I have  not managed to find a copy of this; what follows is just based on sources I found for free on the Web.

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Tuesday, 26 October 2021

A promenade at Betz

For a scholarly description of the garden at Betz and its creation, the English-speaking reader is referred to Gabriel Wick's article, which is available on H-Net. 

The following account is from an old guidebook by  André Hallys, translated into English in 1920 as
The Spell of the Heart of France.  I am reproducing it (from Gutenberg) mainly because I enjoyed the prose.  Hallys provides some record of the fabriques which still stood in the early twentieth century.  The rest of his text is is derived mainly from the poem by Joseph-Antoine-Joachim Cérutti  Les Jardins de Betz, written in 1785 (though published only in 1792). This is a verbose piece, so it is  nice to have a few snippets of English translation! 

Cérutti is an interesting character.  An inveterate writer and versifier, he started out his career as a Jesuit schoolmaster, but later became a prominent Revolutionary journalist.  (It was he who delivered the eulogy at Mirabeau's funeral in 1791) . In the 1780s he had various aristocratic patrons, and had clearly been charged with composing inscriptions and mottoes for the garden at Betz.  His poem, which was no doubt originally intended for the entertainment of the princesse de Monaco's guests, was modelled on the abbé Delille's highly popular Les Jardins, ou l'art d'embellir les paysages (1782).  André Hallys has no difficulty in finding plenty of anti-clerical and anti-despotic sentiments in the text.  [Most prescient was the final comment in Cérutti's  notes to the poem: For two hundred year, France has been pregnant with revolution; she will give birth before the end of the century.]
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Saturday, 23 October 2021

Betz - The King of Morocco's garden


The park at Betz. Plate from Alexandre Laborde's Description des nouveaux jardins (1808)

The princesse de Monaco by an unknown artist         
( Wikimedia)
In 1780 Marie Catherine de Brignole-Sale, princesse de Monaco bought the
 ancient feudal domain of Betz  in order to be close to her lover, the prince de Condé, exiled in nearby Chantilly.  Between 1782 and 1789 she constructed a Renaissance style château, with a park inspired by the latest taste in landscape design. The result is acknowledged to have been one of the finest examples of French  picturesque garden. 

The park at Betz has had a quite different fate from the parks at Ermenonville or Méréville, both of which are now in public ownership. The 70 hectare estate, in the commune of Betz, some 60 kilometres north-east of Paris, now belongs to no less a personage than Mohammed VI,  King of Morocco.  Although the park is classed as "national patrimony" it is not just  completely private -  it is hidden behind high stone walls and patrolled by armed guards....
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Tuesday, 19 October 2021

Hubert Robert's gardens - 2017 Expo

I have a bad habit of finding interesting exhibitions several years after they have closed....

Here, before the notices disappear from the internet, are some notes from a exhibition on Hubert Robert as "composer of landscapes", which took place in  Autumn 2017.   The exhibition, curated by Gabriel Wick,  was held in the beautiful and dramatically-located Château de la Roche-Guyon, in the Vale d'Oise,  which is owned by the La Rochefoucauld family.  

The exhibition offered an opportunity to present some of the new research of Gabriel Wick and others on Robert's less-well known garden projects -  at the Château du Val, the Hôtel de Noailles in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, at Betz, and, above all at La Roche-Guyon itself.  It brought together some  sixteen paintings, thirty four drawings and a number of architectural models and published works from both private and public collections.  Also featured were  photographs  by Catherine Pachowski of the surviving fabriques - many of which are now in poor state of preservation.

 The exhibits were set out in  the public rooms of the Château on ground floor overlooking the grounds.  Also offered were tours of the remnants of the jardin anglais at Laroche-Guyon - which has since been opened to the public on a regular basis.. 

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Monday, 18 October 2021

Hubert Robert at Méréville


Here are two striking oil paintings of Méréville by Hubert Robert which were auctioned by Sotheby's New York in January of last last year. Although they have been previously exhibited and documented, this is the first time that images have been readily accessible on the internet.  According to the catalogue notes, the pictures originally hung in Laborde's  hôtel in the rue Cerutti  and were at one time the property of comte Alexandre de Laborde (1853-1944) the financier's great-grandson. The sale price was $620,000, which was within the estimate.


See Sotheby's, Master Paintings, Evening Sale, 29th January 2020, lot 66.  Pair of  oils depicting:  The lake and château at Méréville; The rustic bridge and the Temple of Filial Piety. Each 64 cm x 81 cm.
https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2019/master-paintings-evening-sale/hubert-robert-the-lake-and-chateau-at-mereville
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Thursday, 7 October 2021

A Visit to Méréville c.1808

The following is an extract from the Description des nouveaux jardins de la France written in 1808 by Laborde's youngest son Alexandre. The engravings show illustrations by Constant Bourgeois. At the time of writing, the estate was still in the hands of  the Laborde family, with the trees and plants now in full maturity.  Laborde's account conveys a keen sense of how the garden was intended to be experienced, as its different features progressively revealed themselves to the admiring eye of the visitor.

 Alexandre de Laborde, Description des nouveaux jardins de la France et de ses anciens chateaux (1808), p.95-
Description des nouveaux jardins de la France et de ses anciens châteaux - Google Books

The  English translation is given in the book itself. 

SEVENTEEN leagues from Paris and three from Etampes, in the middle of the lonely plains of Beauce, is a charming valley watered by a small river called the Juine, which is never known either to freeze or to overflow. Even very near its source it becomes sufficiently deep to carry boats, and its channel is sufficiently elevated to give all the effect which can be wished for in the composition of the landscape.

It displays all its beauty particularly in the neighbourhood of Méréville. This spot has accordingly been fixed upon for planting one of the finest gardens in the environs of Paris.

The river, which is the principal beauty of the spot, divides into two branches. The one flows in its natural channel, turns several mills and afterwards forms a cascade of two feet, which is seen and heard from the mansion; from thence it spreads through the valley, forming several islands and delightful walks. Its banks are planted with trees so fine and so high, that a boat may sail in the shade round the whole garden. The other branch runs in a subterraneous aqueduct for the space of three quarters of a league, and again makes its appearance through an artificial grotto of rocks in the interior of a building which was intended for a dairy.

The water rushes in the first place into a basin raised in the middle of the grotto, and is afterwards distributed through the room by spouts ornamented with white marble. The pavement as well as the parapets are also of white marble. The coolness of this place, the gentle light which it receives from above and the beauty of the marble , recalls to mind the Arabian authors and the ancient Eastern Fairy Tales. Upon leaving this building, the river, continuing its subterraneous passage, at last falls again into its own bed by a cascade of from ten to twelve feet high, and forms one of the finest situations which any mountainous country can present to the view.

The whole rising ground which commands this site, is planted with tall ever-greens, the rocks are overgrown with ivy, creepers and other plants of that kind. Steps are hewn in the rock leading to the bottom of the cascade as well as to several vaults which are near it.

.... In ignota, Palinure, jacebis arena. VIRG., V, 871. Et statuent tumulum, et lumulo solemnia mittent. VIRG VI, 380


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Wednesday, 6 October 2021

Méréville - a restoration project



In this video you can see the actress Catherine Deneuve starring (in English) in an new, unexpected role, that of "godmother" to an 18th-century garden!

The garden in question is the park at Méréville, near Étampes, which, like La Ferté-Vidame, once belonged to the financier Jean-Joseph Laborde; The restoration is yet another ambitious and ongoing French heritage project

Laborde acquired the estate at Méréville in 1784, shortly after he had surrendered La Ferté-Vidame.  He employed the most renowned architects of the age - François-Joseph Bélanger and Hubert Robert "of the ruins" -  to collaborate with him on the design of the park.  The result was one of the last, and finest, of the naturalistic  jardins pittoresques, of the pre-Revolutionary years, admired by contemporaries, along with Ermenonville and the gardens of the princesse de Monaco at Betz. 

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Sunday, 3 October 2021

Lost splendours - La Ferté-Vidame




This  evocative ruin, is all that remains of the once magnificent château de la Ferté-Vidame, in the department of Eure-et-Loir, the property of the fabulously wealthy financier, Jean-Joseph de Laborde.  Eighteenth-century writers argued long and hard over the moral status of riches, the merits of luxury,  the worth of artistic patronage...  This battered ghost reminds us that, for one generation at least the answer to such questions, was to be brutally decided by the guillotine and the wrecker's hammer.

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