Versailles: Grand Trianon Gardens
Le Nôtre, André; Mansart, Jules Hardouin

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Alternative Title
Grand Trianon Gardens
Date
1667-1700Description
The upper north garden, pool with fountain; The gardens of the Grand Trianon have largely preserved the layout designed in 1667-1668. They lie along an east-west axis leading from the peristyle, with a high parterre with two pools, dropping to the low parterre, which leads to the large Bassin du Plat-Fond or Miroir. When the Grand Trianon itself was built, the plans for the garden were entrusted to Le Nôtre, then, at his death in 1700, to Hardouin Mansart, who finished planting the bosquets. From that time the garden developed northwards in a formal sequence comprising the Buffet d'Eau, the Jardin des Marronniers, the Amphithéâtre des Antiques and many 'Salles Vertes'. At the end of the Trianon-sous-Bois wing the Jardin de Laocöon leads back to the former Jardin des Sources (destroyed 1776) and the Jardin du Roi. The sculptural decoration of the Trianon gardens was installed by Hardouin Mansart from 1704: the sculptures for the water-basins are mostly reused from the Bassins des Saisons in the grounds of Versailles. Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.groveart.com/ (accessed 2/10/2008)
Type of Work
garden; fountainSubject
landscapes, rulers and leaders, Gardens, Louis XIV, King of France, 1638-1715, Baroque
Rights
Rights Statement
Licensed for educational and research use by the MIT community only