BOOKS ON ARCHITECTURE
Author(s) |
Androuet du Cerceau, Jacques |
Title |
Premier [et Second] volume des plus excellents bastiments
de France... |
Imprint |
Paris, s.n., 1576-1579 |
Localisation |
Paris, Ensba, Les 1594-1595 |
Subject |
Castles |
French
Les
plus excellents bastiments de France, an anthology of the finest
achievements in French architecture of the Renaissance, are among the
most quoted books on architecture. Every historian of architecture has
examined the plates in this work, so precious for the understanding
of the 16th century French art of construction. Thanks to du Cerceau,
we may have an idea of numerous chateaux no longer in existence, such
as Bury, Madrid or Verneuil, and the former condition of edifices which
have been disfigured or completely transformed, such as Amboise, Anet
or Chantilly. A third volume is lacking, which would have allowed us
to see some of the "plus excellents bâtiments" in Paris,
of which several preparatory drawings have been kept. David Thompson
summarized all these questions entirely in the partial facsimile edition
he prepared and presented in 1988.
Even though
it is well known, this work is nonetheless problematical. In fact, there
seems to be no coherence in the presentations of the different chateaux,
as they appear in the two volumes in no visible chronological or hierarchical
order. The types of representation are very varied; du Cerceau adopts
no systematic bias, alternating bird's-eye views, plane elevations and
elevations in perspective with no apparent logic. As for the buildings
in existence, one often notices large differences between what we see
or analyze in reality and the image the author chose to give of them.
In fact,
our familiarity with these representations often makes us forget just
how original the enterprise was. At that date nothing comparable existed
in Italy or elsewhere in Europe; anthologies of buildings concerned
only antiquity then. Catherine de Medici no doubt originated the project.
Du Cerceau affirms it clearly in the dedication of the first volume,
and also in that of the Leçons de perspective positive
of 1576, "Madame, si l’injure du temps et troubles qui ont
cours, n’eussent empêché mon accès et vue
des châteaux et maisons, que votre Majesté désire
être compris aux livres qu’il vous a plu me commander de
dresser et dessiner des plus excellents Palais, maisons Royales et édifices
de ce Royaume, dès à présent j’aurais satisfait
à votre volonté, qui m’est si précieuse,
que ne pouvant en cela vous rendre si contente que mon obéissance
désire, j’ai pensé d’employer cependant le
temps à quelque autre œuvre, qui à mon avis vous
sera agréable et de plaisir". The royal family was fond
of this project, for in the dedication to the second Livre d'architecture
of 1582 du Cerceau comes back to the subject, "Sire, étant
votre Majesté à Montargis, je reçus ce bien de
votre accoutumée bénignité et clémence,
de me prêter l’oreille à vous discourir de plusieurs
bâtiments excellents de votre Royaume, et entre autres propos,
me demandâtes si je parachevais les livres des bâtiments
de France, mon âge et indisposition servirent de légitime
excuse, n’ayant moyen, sans votre libéralité, de
me transporter sur les lieux afin d’en prendre les dessins pour
après les mettre en lumière et satisfaire à vos
commandements".
Les
plus excellents bastiments de France are thus a royal command,
to which Charles IX, Henri III and especially their mother attached
a certain importance. Not astonishing, coming from Catherine de Medici.
The Queen, who accumulated portraits of the members of the court, could
in the same way wish to have a collection representing the residences
of the king and his grand vassals. It is necessary to insist on this
particular destination of the work: it will allow better comprehension
of the way it was carried out. Historians have readily pointed out the
errors, even the improbabilities that come to light when one confronts
the image with the archeological reality. But the book was not conceived
as a collection of documents to be used by future researchers, rather
as a vibrant homage adressed less to architecture or French architects
than to the dynasty which rendered possible the birth of so many masterpieces,
and which allowed France to "équipoller l'antique"
in the monumental register. There is a poetic dimension in Les plus
excellents bastiments, epic even. It is the architectural equivalent
of Ronsard's Franciade which appeared for the first time in
1572. Du Cerceau sings not of the "hauts-faits" of the prince
and his valiant knights, but the "hauts bâtiments" of
the Valois and their entourage. The heroes are the owners and patrons,
the king, the connétable de Montmorency, the maréchal
de Saint-André, and not the architects, rarely named. The very
title of the collection introduces the reader to a superlative register
having obviously nothing in it of the scientific, in the modern sense
of the term. Du Cerceau works in the same way as Ronsard who asserts
to neglect the real in favor of the likely: "Je dis ceci pour ce
que la meilleure partie des nôtres pense que la Franciade soit
une histoire des Rois de France, comme si j’avais entrepris d’être
historiographe et non poète" (Épître au lecteur,
Œuvres complètes, Paris, Gallimard, bibl. de la
Pléiade, 1, 1993, p. 1182). It is unimportant whether Francus
came or didn't come to Gaul, even whether or not he even existed. In
the epic context, the narration is likely, the poem is above all a work
of art, to the glory of Charles IX. In the same way du Cerceau, such
as a poet "porté de fureur et d’art (sans toutefois
se soucier beaucoup des règles de grammaire) et surtout favorisé
d’une prévoyance et naturel jugement" (ibidem),
does not worry about being exact, but interprets, harks back, imagines.
We mustn't attribute the ostentatious expansions of the Tuileries, Chenonceaux
or Charleval to the architects of those chateaux, but rather to the
muse of Androuet du Cerceau. These disproportionate plans and sumptious
elevations were not real, obviously, and never would be, but they could
have been, for their poetic grandeur was on a level with that of Charles'
and Catherine's. We cannot understand the Les plus excellents bastiments
de France, this architectural Franciade unless we take
into consideration the fact that the author is a poet and not a builder
– all of which Philibert De l'Orme had perceived perfectly, he
who knew how to make the difference, if not between historians and poets,
at least between architects and draftsmen, "donneurs de portraits
et faiseurs de dessins, dont la plupart n’en saurait bien tracer
ou décrire aucun, si ce n’est par l’aide et moyen
des peintres, qui les savent plutôt bien farder, laver, ombrager
et colorer, que bien faire et ordonner avec toutes leurs mesures"
(Premier tome, f. 21v°). Ut pictura poesis: for
modern buildings as for antique ones, de Cerceau introduces his reader
into the domaine of the imaginary.
Yves Pauwels (Centre d’études supérieures
de la Renaissance, Tours) – 2006
Critical bibliography
J. Androuet du Cerceau,
Les plus excellents bastiments de France..., D. Thomson (ed.),
Paris, Sand & Conti, 1988.
F. Boudon, "Les Plus Excellents Bastiments de France de Jacques
Ier Androuet Du Cerceau, à Paris en 1576 et 1579", S. Deswarte-Rosa (ed.), Sebastiano Serlio à Lyon. Architecture et imprimerie,
Lyon, Mémoire Active, 2004, pp. 451-453.
F. Boudon & H. Couzy, "Les plus excellents bâtiments de
France. Une anthologie de châteaux à la fin du XVIe siècle",
L’information d’histoire de l’Art, 1974,
pp. 8-12, 103-114.
F. Boudon & J. Blécon, Philibert Delorme et le château
royal de Saint-Léger-en-Yvelines, Paris, Picard, 1985.
Y. Pauwels, L’architecture au temps de la Pléiade,
Paris, Monfort, 2002, pp. 87-89.
Y. Pauwels, « Petits arrangements avec le réel. Jacques Androuet du Cerceau à Écouen », Revue de l’art, 178, 2012, p. 33-41.
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