July 02, 2009

Jefferson’s pursuit of happiness

When Thomas Jefferson came to Paris in 1788 to negotiate the peace treaty that established the independence of the United States, he made a close study of the works of his fellow architects.
He acquainted himself with the neoclassical designs of Ledoux and Devailly, and admired Gabriel's collonnades in the Place de la Concorde and the Petit Trianon at Versailles.
He also made frequent visits to the marchands-merciers-the forerunners of the antique dealers and decorators of our own day-whose premises for the most part were on the quays of the Seine.

He found there furniture made by the best-known cabinetmakers, picture frames gilded on the spot, clocks, busts (some of them from the atelier of Houdon), sumptuous wall hangings made at Lyons in the style of Philippe de la Salle, and even simple cloth printed at the Jouy manufactory near Versailles.

Schooled in simplicity by English master craftsmen and architects and by a Puritan upbringing, Jefferson was not attracted by all the surface glitter of an artificial and precious society. He liked beautiful proportions and fine materials (though this did not prevent him from buying a beautiful gilded drawing-room suite covered in silk).He was to realize his ideal of unostentatious elegance and subdued dignity later at Monticello, his house in Virginia, and, later still, in the White House. So it came about that the Louis Seize style has continued to be the official style of the United States almost to the present day; it can still be found in the embassies and great banks that have resisted the taste for abstract and even Pop decoration.

Jefferson gave Benjamin Latrobe the job of carrying out the plans which the French architect L'Enfant drew for Washington. He himself was one of the most elegant of the neoclassical architects, as his design for the University of Charlottesville shows. Thus a simplified Louis Seize style flourished in the United States until about 1825. Furnishings and silverware remained under English influence; on the other hand, tapestries, wallpaper and porcelain usually came from France. The French liberal émigrés, such as Talleyrand, Chateaubriand and the Marquise de la Tour du Pin, who were so warmly welcomed in America, and did much to make their style current in the years when relations with England were still strained. However, the French Empire style had little influence, and the English Regency style was de rigueur until about 1840. The Louis Seize manner became heavier in the Victorian era and then sank into pastiche-to this we owe the smaller version of the Place de la Concorde in Philadelphia, and Doris Duke's house in New York, the exact replica of a house in Bordeaux; but it remains the style of people with social pretensions, and French decorators have exported miles of Louis Seize paneling, generally stripped, to form a background for hundreds of Impressionist paintings and countless bergeres and console tables, the latter regilded for town houses or painted in monochrome for the country. The Louis Seize style, then, is the mark of good taste, while Louis Quinze can be, well, nouveau riche, for it is not so well adapted to the simplicity welcomed by the founders of the Republic.


Since the close of the 18th century, Americans celebrated in the political, literary and social worlds have come to Europe in search of luxury, refinement, and curiosities they could not find at home.
But they, in their turn, have given the Europeans lessons in common sense and simplicity: from Jefferson to Calder, from "The Fall of the House of Usher" to "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes." On occasion, you will find on this blog essays speculating on these exchanges.

27 comments:

  1. Russ2.7.09

    Thank you, we will.
    Very fine post.

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  2. SM fan2.7.09

    As always, best I've read on the subject.

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  3. C and C2.7.09

    Oh, Ms Edna, nicely done.

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  4. Anonymous2.7.09

    I will use this -

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  5. TO grandma2.7.09

    Thank you, what a thoughtful post.

    ReplyDelete
  6. UCLA fan2.7.09

    lovely, thank you

    ReplyDelete
  7. blogger (amateur)2.7.09

    wow, learned something, again
    thanks, coach

    ReplyDelete
  8. a blogger too2.7.09

    thank you Ms Edna, you are simply the best.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Ms. Capshaw2.7.09

    Ms Edna,
    I salute you

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous2.7.09

    I am so glad I found this blog in my internet wanderings. Truly a fine experience.

    ReplyDelete
  11. a blogger3.7.09

    what an inspirational read for the 4th
    thank you

    ReplyDelete
  12. blogger3.7.09

    nice post, thanks

    ReplyDelete
  13. love from Sweden5.7.09

    Tak for thinking of Lars

    ReplyDelete
  14. Sylvia and Mona5.7.09

    Ms Edna, where are you spending your 4th?

    ReplyDelete
  15. Ms Edna5.7.09

    working my friends, working

    ReplyDelete
  16. Mona5.7.09

    what brought that on?

    ReplyDelete
  17. Ms Edna5.7.09

    obligations of friendship

    ReplyDelete
  18. Sylvia5.7.09

    Where?

    ReplyDelete
  19. Anonymous5.7.09

    nice read for the holiday

    ReplyDelete
  20. a reader5.7.09

    One of the nicest posts for the Fourth of July holiday.
    Thank you, very thoughtful.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Anonymous5.7.09

    yea, I agree. Lovely read.

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  22. a blogger5.7.09

    interesting and informative post. thanks

    ReplyDelete
  23. a new blog fan6.7.09

    I am so glad I found this blog, and this post, even after the fact. I did enjoy reading something constructive about the USA, for a change. Thank you

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  24. I enjoyed this post as well as your "Whistler in Chelsea" post.

    ReplyDelete
  25. web crawler19.11.09

    thank you. great post. come to it by accident. i guess a happy one.

    ReplyDelete