The marvellous painting, by Claude Jacquart, was acquired for the collections of the Château de Lunéville in 2015. It is a unique visual memory of a grand ceremonial occasion at the Court of Duke Leopold, in this case the wedding on 19th August 1721 of Henri-Jacques de Lorraine, Prince de Lixheim, a distant cousin of the Duke's, and Anne-Marguerite-Gabrielle, second daughter of the Prince de Craon , Leopold's "favori en titre".
The artist:
Claude Jacquart (1686-1736) was the most prominent painter in Nancy in the first third of the 18th century. One of the first generation of artists to be trained at Duke Leopold's new Académie de Peinture et de Sculpture, he was pupil of Claude Charles. Having studied in Rome, he was recalled to Lunéville to assist Jean-Baptiste Martin with his series of paintings of the victories of Charles V. He was Professor at the Academy, then director, and in 1714 received the title of "peintre ordinaire de son altesse royale". Among other works, he produced battle scenes, religious and mythological subjects, and participated in the decor of the primatiale of Nancy. He was also a portrait painter and, as here, chronicler of the grand events of the Lorraine aristocracy.
Provenance:
The painting was commissioned by the father of the bride, François-Vincent-Marc de Beauvau, first Prince of Craon (1676 -1754), for whom the marriage represented the crucial step of allying his family directly to the ruling dynasty of Lorraine. It was inventoried at his death in 1754 as hanging in the grand apartment of the hôtel de Craon in Lunéville, a property which he had passed to his daughter. The painting remained in the family collections until 2015, when it was pre-emptied at the sale by Drouet, on 15th June 2015, of furniture and objects from the château de Craon at Haroué. (This sale caused some controversy at the time, especially since Haroué itself is open to the public - happily the Jacquart at least has found a new appropriate museum context.)
According to one source, individual portraits of the Prince and Princess of Lixheim, painted in 1732 by Jacquart, were also once to be found at Haroué; but I am not sure whether these still exist.
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k96599380/f436.item
The setting:
Following the celebration of the marriage in the chapel, the wedding procession leaves the Château on its way to the nuptial blessing in the nearby church of Saint-Jacques. Jacquart exploits the theatrical potential of the courtyard to showcase the cortege; action centres on the carriage of the Duke and his family, who are surrounded by their gardes du corps and gardes suisses. A heterogenous crowd of fashionably dressed onlookers complete the scene. The palace had just risen from its ashes, after the fire of 3rd January 1719. Boffrand's magnificent central portico is shown to effect. The shallow roofs depicted in the picture, hidden behind a balustrade, were were to be replaced in 1730 by slate mansards more suited to the climate of Lorraine. The chapel still has a temporary roof and scaffolding.
Enlarged reproduction of the picture, on show in the courtyard in 2016. Photo published in L'Est Républicain, 27.04.2016. |
The occasion:
The married couple:
The Groom:
Jacques Henri de Lorraine (1698-1734) known as the chevalier de Lorraine, was the second son of Charles de Lorraine, comte de Marsan, and a distant cousin of Duke Leopold. He was a career soldier (in the French army). The Duke showered him with all sorts of gifts, in revenues and lands, culminating in 1728 with the grant of the sovereign principality of Lixheim (Lixhin) a tiny enclave between Lorraine and Alsace in the foothills of the Vosges, with a high Protestant population. The marriage allowed the groom to accede to the title of Grand maître de la maison in the ducal Household. In 1729 Francis named both the Prince de Beauvau-Craon and his son-in-law the Prince de Lixheim as members of his Regency council.
Anonymous portrait of the Prince de Lixheim from the Abbaye de Royaumont. Sold by Christies in 2006, now in the musée Lorraine (Wikimedia). |
Rather sadly, Lixheim is now best remembered for his death, which took place in a duel at the hands of the duc de Richelieu. To the disapproval of the family, Richelieu had recently married one of the Prince's relatives, Elisabeth-Sophie de Lorraine, princesse de Guise. The two men were now with the French army laying seige to Philippsburg.
Hubert Cole narrates the story:
Richelieu was invited to take supper with the prince de Conti. Either because the prince had forgotten or because he thought that differences would be overlooked on active service, he had been rash enough to invite at the same time two of the new duchesse de Richelieu's relations who had refused to attend the wedding: the prince de Pons, colonel of one of the regiments in Richelieu's sector, and his brother, the prince de Lixin. Both were arrogant and still seething with sage at the upstart Richelieu's impertinence in marrying into their family.
Richelieu was delayed in the trenches, and dusk was falling by the time that he reached Conti’s tent. His two reluctant relations had already arrived, and they greeted him coldly. As they sat down to eat, the prince de Lixin noticed flecks of dust on Richelieu’s coat and sweat on his forehead and, sneering, remarked that he had had to get himself cleaned up to marry Mademoiselle de Guise, and it was a pity that he had relapsed into his natural filth. The insult was unforgivable as well as peculiarly inappropriate, for in an age of general uncleanliness, Richelieu was noteworthy for his finicky addiction to washing and his lavish use of scent. All the court had giggled over the story of how a very sweet-smelling bishop who called on Maria Leczynska was twitted by her on his remarkable fragrance when in fact all that he had done was to sit for a few minutes in a chair that Richelieu had occupied some hours earlier.
Hubert Cole, First Gentleman of the Bedchamber: the life of Louis-Francois-Armand, maréchal duc de Richelieu (1965), p.77-78.
The bride:
Pierre Gobert, Anne-Marguerite-Gabrielle, Princesse de Lixheim in about 1730 (Wikimedia) |
Detail from "Le Thé à l’anglaise" by Michel Barthélemy Ollivier (1766) - the Maréchale de Mirepoix is the left of the two women seated together. See Le Thé à l’anglaise - Histoire analysée en images et œuvres d’art | https://histoire-image.org/ |
References
Thierry Franz, "Claude Jacquart, Marche du mariage de Monseigneur le prince de Lixin". Notice on the Musée Lorrain website (with bibliography):
https://musee-lorrain.nancy.fr/les-collections/catalogues-numeriques/la-lorraine-pour-horizon/une-independance-retrouvee-1697-1737/marche-du-mariage-de-monseigneur-le-prince-de-lixin
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