The Château de Maisons (now Château de Maisons-Laffitte), in Yvelines,
Île-de-France, designed by François Mansart from 1630 to 1651, is a
prime example of French baroque architecture and a reference point in
the history of French architecture.
History The family of Longueil, long associated with the
Parlement de Paris, had been in possession of part of the seigneurie of
Maisons since 1460, and a full share since 1602. Beginning in 1630, and
for the next decades, René de Longueil, first president of the Cour des
aides and then président à mortier to the Parlement de Paris, devoted
the fortune inherited by his wife, Madeleine Boulenc de Crévecœur (who
died in 1636), to the construction of a magnificent château. By 1649 he
was able to spend the summer months in his new house, but works on the
outbuildings continued after that date. Louis XIV visited Maisons in
April 1651.
The attribution to François Mansart was common knowledge among
contemporaries. Charles Perrault reported its reputation: "The château
of Maisons, of which Mansart made all the buildings and the gardens, is
of such a singular beauty that there is no foreigner who does not go
there to see it, as one of the finest things that we have in France."[1]
Nevertheless, the sole surviving document mentioning Mansart's name is a
payment of 20,000 livres from Longueil in 1657, apparently occasioned by
the final completion of the château. A pamphlet with the title La
Mansarade accuses the architect of having realised, after completing the
construction of the first floor, that he had committed an error in the
plans and razed everything built so far in order to commence anew.
Perrault emphasizes that the architect had the habit of
remodeling certain parts of his buildings more than once, in a search
for perfection. This may explain the extraordinary length of time the
construction required.
At the death of René de Longueil, in 1677, the château passed to
his heirs until 1732, and then in succession to the marquise de
Belleforière, then to the marquis de Soyécourt. In 1777 it became the
property of Louis XVI's brother the comte d'Artois, who carried out
important interior transformations under the direction of his house
architect François-Joseph Bélanger. These works were interrupted in 1782
for lack of funds. Maisons ceased to be kept up.
Confiscated during the Revolution as "national goods", the
château was sold in 1798 to an army provisioner, M. Lauchère, again in
1804 to maréchal Jean Lannes, and finally in 1818, to the Parisian
banker Jacques Lafitte. Starting in 1834, Lafitte proceeded to develop
the surrounding park as building lots; he tore down the fine stables to
furnish construction materials for the purchasers. After his daughter
the princesse de la Moskowa sold the château in 1850, it passed to M.
Thomas de Colmar, and to the painter Tilman Grommé, who farmed out the
small park and demolished the entrance gateway to the forecourt,
enclosing the severely reduced space with a wrought iron grille brought
from the Château de Mailly in Picardy.
In 1905, the State purchased the château to save it from
demolition. It was classed a monument historique in 1914.
Architecture The Château de Maisons was built between the Seine and
the forest of Saint-Germain-en-Laye, with its garden front oriented to
the southeast. Originally it comprised the garden, a small park of 33
hectares and a large outer park of 300 hectares. The visitor arrived by
one of two avenues that crossed in a T intersection before the gate to
the cour d'honneur[2] The principal central axis led to the forest, the
cross axis through the village to the southwest and to the river, thence
on to Paris. Three gateways stood at the far ends of the avenues.
On one side and the other of the avant-cour, Mansart constructed
the stables, masterworks of architecture whose monumental character gave
a preview of those that would be built at Versailles and Chantilly. Of
these works there exists only a grotto, that served also to water the
horses.
The château itself stood on a rectangular platform outlined in
the French manner with a dry moat. The cour d'honneur was defined by
terraces. The central block extends symmetrically into short wings,
composed of several sections, each with its own roofline, with raked
roofs and tall chimney stacks, in several ranges, with a broken façade
reminiscent of the planning in work of Pierre Lescot and Philibert
Delorme in the preceding century. The single pile construction typical
of its epoch carries three storeys, a basement supporting a ground floor
and piano nobile with three attic floors above.
Interiors The grand central entrance vestibule of stone was
originally enclosed by exceptionally fine wrought iron grilles, which
are today at the Louvre. Large bas-reliefs of The Seasons were executed
by Gilles Guérin after drawings provided by Jacques Sarazin, who oversaw
all the sculpture provided for Maisons. There are lunettes representing
The Elements, for which Sarazin's drawings also survive.[3] This
vestibule gives onto two state apartments. The apartment on the left,
called the Appartement des Captifs was that of René de Longueuil; it has
retained its original decor. The chimneypiece of the corner room, the
chambre de parade represents a bas-relief medallion of Louis XIII
supported by captives and a frieze of the triumph of Louis XIII, works
of Gilles Guérin that have given a name to the suite of rooms.
The apartment on the right, called the Appartement de la Renommée
was entirely redecorated by Bélanger for the comte d'Artois in a
discreet neoclassical style quite in keeping with the general classic
style of the château.
The staircase was of a type that Mansart originated at Balleroy,[4]
in which the central space is left open, so that the flights climb the
four walls.
On the parade floor, the apartment to the right, called the
Appartement des Aigles for the Empire style decoration effected by
maréchal Lannes in expectation of the visit of Napoleon, is
undistinguished. That on the left, on the other hand, the Appartement du
Roi is also called à l'italienne in that it is covered in false
vaulting. The apartment consists of a vast Salle des Fêtes employed also
in the character of a guardroom, with a tribune for musicians. It opens
into the Salon d'Hercule from the painting of Hercules defeating the
Hydra that formerly was featured on the chimneybreast, with sculptures
by Guérin. In the end pavilion is a domed room articulated by therm
figures, a precursor to the grand salon of Vaux-le-Vicomte. A small oval
cabinet, or private withdrawing room, the Cabinet des Miroirs bears a
refined decor, and a parquet floor inlaid with pewter and bone.
Influence of Maisons The Château de Franconville at Saint-Martin-du-Tertre
(Val-d'Oise), built by Gabriel-Hippolyte Destailleur for the duc de
Massa in 1876 takes Maisons for its model. In the suburbs of Beiping, the Chinese multi-millionaire Zhang
Yuchen built a copy of the Château, which contains a hotel and seminar
center opened in 2004. It is called Zhang-Laffitte. The Plaza Constitución terminal train station (Buenos Aires,
Argentina) opened on January 1st. 1887 and rebuilt in 1900, is also an
example of the influence of Maisons.
Notes ^ "Le château de Maisons, dont Mansart a fait tous les
bâtiments et les jardinages, est d'une beauté si singulière qu'il n'est
point d'étranger qui ne l'aille voir comme l'une des plus belles choses
que nous ayons en France." ^ Today they are the avenue Eglé and avenue Albine of the
surrounding urbanisation. ^ Barbara Brejon de Lavergnée and Françoise de La Moureyre,
"Drawings by the sculptor Jacques Sarazin" Master Drawings 29.3 (Autumn
1991, pp. 284-300), p. 289, and figs 12-15. ^ Cecil Gould and Anthony Blunt, "The Château de Balleroy" The
Burlington Magazine 87 No. 511 (October 1945, pp. 248-252), p. 251.