“So which is your
favorite Louis”? Monsieur X leaned over and inquired. The entire dinner table went quiet. Even after a two year sojourn in Paris, I
still didn’t have a grip on the Louies, but instead of coming clean I blurted
out the first one that came to mind: “Louis XIV”. “Vraiment?” he replied with the faintest look
of horror. It was only months later I
understood his puzzlement.
Although I soon was taught to abhor labeling furniture by
the reign in which something was made (as interiors weren’t jettisoned the
moment a ruler died), 18th century France does seem to be the
exception. During this time, style and
luxury became the country’s greatest export and were hand-in-hand with its
national identity.
Louis XIV (reign 1643 – 1715)
Louis XIV showing off his dancing legs
Versailles' power corridor: The Hall of Mirrors
It was the Sun King himself who awed the world with the
magnificence of his palace Versailles.
Courtiers were kept in line with pomp and ceremony and the decorative
arts reflected the mighty power of its sovereign in their somber splendor. Today the stiff opulence of
this style is better suited to a Wall Street titan’s duplex or in a museum than
most mere mortals’ domiciles.
A Louis XIV bureau Mazarin in a setting by
Valerian Rybar
Louis XV (1723 – 1774)
Louis XV, Quatroze’s great-grandson – lower heels, lower
hair
The Dauphine’s apartment at Versailles
Louis XV by contrast is about intimacy and comfort reflected
in curved backs, cabriole legs, and smaller proportions. It is my friend Maureen Footer’s favorite and
the showroom pictured above features a few of her own Louis XV pieces.
An interior, circa 1915, painted by Walter Gay illustrates Louis XV curves
Louis XV chairs in an Elsie de Wolfe treillaged room
Louis XVI (reign 1774 - 1792)
Louis XVI who perhaps spent too much time hunting and making
locks
Louis XVI salon at the chateau de Champ de Bataille
If I could be beamed back in time, my answer now to Monsieur
X would be Louis Seize.
Straight lines,
precision of form, and Classical ornament – strigillation, anyone? – send my
pulse racing.
Excavations of the ancient
Roman cities Herculaneum and Pompeii fueled a new fascination with antiquity in
the second half of the 18
th century.
Neoclassicism was not just a passing fad – it continued to dominate design through Napoleon’s reign, and was returned to a century later in Art
Deco and beyond with great aplomb as you can see in the following and in my tome
Regency Redux...
Pauline de Rothschild’s sitting room at Albany, decorated by
John Fowler
Neoclassical seat furniture in the apartment of interior
designer
Bill Brockschmidt and architect
Richard Dragisic
And which Louis are you?