Publication Date: September 12, 2017
Publisher: Vendome Press
Versailles is one of the most photographed places
in the world. Yet masses of tourists make it virtually impossible to imagine
the splendor of the palace as it existed from the time of Louis XIV, the Sun
King, in the 17th century, until the fall of Napoleon III in 1870. Now, four
talented photographers were granted unlimited access to Versailles when the
château was closed to visitors, and their work allows privileged access not
only to the private suites of Louis XV, the boudoirs of Marie-Antoinette and Madame
de Pompadour, the celebrated Hall of Mirrors, the Royal Chapel, the charming
Orangerie, and Marie Antoinette’s bucolic Hamlet, but also to mysterious
chambers and hushed apartments never normally seen. Captions describe daily
life at Versailles and the momentous events that have taken place there, all
published in a sumptuous oversize format befitting its majestic subject.
The queen, who was distinctly bored by these
dinners, had a podium for musicians installed.
At dawn on 6 October 1789, the famished crowd –
furious with ‘the Austrian woman,’ and having waited all night in the rain –
broke open the gate of the Princes’ Courtyard. When the queen found she could
not open the door to the Antechamber of the Grand Couvert, which had quickly
been bolted, she had to turn back to the king’s apartments, which gave her time
to escape.
Only the king was allowed to sit in this carved
and gilded walnut chair that recently became part of the Versailles
collections. It was never used in his absence, and the other members of the
council sat on the folding stools commissioned from the Foliot family.
The king was a man who concealed his thoughts: the
Duc de Luynes described him as ‘impenetrable not only in his secrecy, but also
very often in the movements of his soul.’
This beautiful, absolutely mesmerizing book was something
very new and very different for me, but I feel like I have been missing out on
a part of the book world and I will forever regret that it took me this long to
find books like this one. This book is filled with incredibly detailed
photographs that display the ambiance and luxuriousness that make up Versailles,
the Sun King’s palace. I have always had a profound interest in Marie
Antoinette, which I know is what led me to request this book in the first
place. However, I was not expecting to be swept away in the pages of this
marvelous find. I have never been to France, let alone the palace of
Versailles, but by spending the few hours that I did reading and enjoying this
book, I felt as if I were walking the mirrored halls and corridors myself.
At the bottom of each page, there is a detailed,
historical description of each photograph. I learned so much history just from
the few sentences that I read per page. I found myself pausing periodically to
read and re-read each little snippet, hoping that I missed nothing. I was most
of all mesmerized by the close up pictures of the embroideries and little
trinkets that belonged to the royals. The photographs were so crystal clear
that I was left in awe and astonishment when I realized they were not actually
sitting before me. As I flipped through the pages, it was so hard for me to believe
that this palace has been around for as long as it has. It all seemed so real
and so modern, which I attributed to the quality and crispness of the images I
saw before me. Anyone would appreciate the marvelousness that is this book – I cannot
wait to read and view many more books just like this one. I will forever
cherish its beauty and magnificence.
***A free copy of this book was provided to me by
the publishers at Vendome Press in exchange for my honest review***