BOOKS ON ARCHITECTURE
Author(s) |
Valladier, André
Greuter, Mathieu |
Title |
Labyrinthe royal de l’Hercule gaulois triomphant... |
Imprint |
Avignon, J. Bramereau, 1600 |
Localisation |
Paris, Binha, 4 Res 814 |
Subject |
Entry |
French
In the
16th and 17th centuries there were numerous solemn entries into Avignon
: those made for the legates and vice-legates, representatives of the
papal authority over the city, and those reserved for the monarchs of
the powerful kingdom of France, in which the city was enclosed. The
entry that the inhabitants of Avignon prepared in 1600 to celebrate
Henri IV and his new bride Marie de Medici, who had just arrived in
Marseille, should have been particularly ostentatious. But apparently
the king was not in too much of a hurry to join the queen, and he stayed
longer than planned at battle in his northern provinces. As a matter
of fact, Avignon had to be satisfied with greeting the young queen alone.
The register
relating this entry is extremely imposing : more than two hundred pages.
The author, André Valladier, is not named, but he cites the work
as his in another of his books, the Tyrannomanie estrangère,
ou Pleinte libellee au Roy…(Paris, Chevallier, 1626).
Born around 1565, he started in the Jesuit order in 1586 and during
the entry, he was a professor of rhetoric in Avignon (where young Fabri
de Peiresc was among his pupils). His Labyrinthe must have
pleased Henri IV, for the king asked him to write the annals of his
reign in 1607, and procured the abbey of Saint-Arnould in Metz for him
after our rhetorician had left the company of the Jesuits (and not without
some problems with Rome). In addition we owe him numerous books, among
which a treatise on oratory art, the Partitiones oratoriae,
published in 1621 in Paris by the bookseller Pierre Chevallier, who
had already published a collection of sermons Les divines parallèles
de la Sainte Eucharistie in 1613.
In fact
from the rhetorical point of view the Labyrinthe is an opulent
work. A "septénaire" work, structured in seven main
sections, each dedicated to a virtue of the king put into parallel with
one of the labours of Hercules and illustrated with an arch, the narration
is enriched by innumerable anagrams, many French and Latin poems and
official speeches, numerous digressions on the most varied subjects,
the perfection of the number seven, the genealogy of the houses of France
and the Medici, the history of Avignon, the praises of preceding legates,
not to mention the perpetual offensive remarks addressed to the Huguenots. Valladier was rather proud of this copia verborum; after he
left the Company of Jesuits, he went to visit the scholar Antoine de
Laval at Moulins and according to what Laval says, he showed him "un
sien œuvre sur l’entrée de la Reine-Mère du
Roi venant en France l’an 1600, œuvre à dire la vérité
pleine de très belles recherches d’Antiquité, embellie
de toutes sortes d’érudition et de doctrine, de poésie,
de devises d’emblèmes, d’énigmes, de gryphes,
d’inscriptions, mais d’un langage si rempli de métaphores,
de figures, si parsemé de mots transposés, qu’étant
pressé par lui-même de lui en dire mon avis, je fus forcé
enfin de lui répondre que si nous parlions comme il écrivait,
il nous faudrait dire que Messieurs Du Perron, Amyot, Du Vair, Coeffeteau
et les autres grandes lumières de notre France n’avaient
pas su notre langue, puisque la sienne était du tout différente,
voire contraire à la leur, ou que sa manière d’écrire
était nouvelle et vicieuse, tant elle m’était nouvelle
et presque étrangère" (Homélies de saint
Jean Chrysostome, Paris, Cramoisy, 1621; quoted by M. Fumaroli,
L’âge de l’éloquence..., p. 274.).
This criticism
of Valladier’s style, which reveals his "classic" 17th
century perfectly, could be applied to architectural structures no doubt
also conceived by him, even if their realization had been entrusted
to the painter Pierre Duplan, and the engravings to an artist from Strasbourg
then working in Avignon, Mathieu Greuter. The simulated structures of
the entry were built carefully and opulently : "il ne faut pas",
the author specifies, "que le lecteur pense qu’il ait rien
de plate peinture, aux temple (sic), tours, galeries, colonnes, piédestaux,
corniches, et autres appartenances des sept arcs ; car tout était
en relief de bois uni de toile par dessus, où il était
de besoin peint et verni en toute sorte de marbre, jaspe et porphyre
; tous les chapiteaux et leurs bases dorées et argentées
à rechange ; l’ordre des colonnes tantôt ionique,
tantôt dorique, tantôt corinthe, tantôt composé,
selon les occurrences, avec les convenances d’architecture gardées
en tout ; les uns doubles les autres simples ; toutes les frises d’une
même couleur écrites de jaune sur l’azur ; les corniches,
architraves, frontispices et couronnements diversifiés de toute
sorte de jaspe, marbre et porphyre, et parfois de bronze, où
le cas le requerrait ; toutes lesquelles choses faisaient montre et
ouvrage de grande majesté et magnificence, car c’est bien
autre de voir un si grand nombre de colonnes, et d’arcs tous relevés,
et à jour avec toutes leurs appartenances, que des pilastres
feints en plate peinture sur des ais rapiécés l’un
avec l’autre" (p. 53). But this richness goes along with
a style which is still very mannerist: the liberties are numerous in
the arches represented in the register, and the sources of inspiration
very typical of the high style such as the waning 16th century imagined
it. The first arch, at the entrance of the fortification elements of
Saint-Lazare is an amplification of a model in Serlio’s Libro
Extraordinario (arch XVI). The structure is characterized by two
couples of columns surmounted by small pediments, segmented, and, in
the center, the very Serlian strategy of interrupting the entablature
with the keystone of the arch. The elocutio, of course was
enriched and adapted to the necessities of the present treatise; the
Doric "propre et ordinaire des guerres" replaces the Corinthian,
and the warlike trophies and pontifical emblems illustrate the glory
of the king and the power of the pope. But the architectural licence
inherited from the mannerist style occurs frequently: in addition to
the interruption of the entablature already mentioned, the triglyphs
of the frieze disappear, and the top ornament consisting of two segmented
half-pediments terminating in volutes clearly affirms its Michelangelesque
character. The "temple de Janus" presents animal pillars,
whose inspiration might well have been suggested to Valladier by the
Nouveaux portraits et figures de termes by Joseph Boillot (Langres,
1592). For the other arches, the author doesn’t hesitate to place,
between the capitals and the entablatures, sculptured figures, angels,
volutes with lions’ or rams’ heads, or other certainly picturesque
figures which were incompatible with the true architecture.
As a matter
of fact, in its writing as in its architectural representations, the
Labyrinthe is perfectly representative of French art under
Henri IV: that period, still entirely impregnated by the style of Philibert
De l’Orme and Ronsard, could not be pleasing to the contemporaries
of Mansart and Boileau. The criticisms that Pierre de Laval addresses
to Valladier greatly resemble those that Fréart de Chambray would
address to the French architecture of the 16th century- and it is moreover
very significant that the antimannerist controversy in which the latter
participated touched on the construction of Saint-Paul-Saint-Louis,
the church of the Maison Professe of the Jesuits in Paris.
Yves Pauwels (Centre d’études supérieures
de la Renaissance, Tours) – 2008
Critical bibliography
L. Brièle, La bibliothèque d’un Académicien
au XVIIe siècle. Inventaire et prisée des livres rares
et des manuscrits de Jean Ballesdens, suivi de son testament, Paris,
Imprimerie nationale, 1885.
F. de Forbin, "Le Labyrinthe royal de l’entrée
triomphante…", F. de Forbin (ed.), Les entrées
solennelles à Avignon et Carpentras. XVIème-XVIIIème
siècles, Exhibition catalogue, Avignon, Bibliothèque
Municipale, sept-oct 1997, [Paris], Direction du Livre et de la Culture, 1997,
pp. 57-59.
M. Fumaroli, L’âge de l’éloquence. Rhétorique
et « res littéraria » de la Renaissance au seuil
de l’époque classique, Paris, Albin Michel, 1994, pp.
274-276 (1st ed.: Geneva, Droz, 1980).
M. McGowan, "Les Jésuites à Avignon : les fêtes
au service de la propagande politique et religieuse", J. Jacquot & É. Koningston (ed.), Les
fêtes de la Renaissance, 3, Paris, CNRS, 1975, pp. 153-171.
Y. Pauwels, "Les entrées : la fête, l’architecture,
le livre", F. de Forbin (ed.), Les entrées solennelles
à Avignon et Carpentras. XVIème-XVIIIème siècles,
Exhibition catalogue, Avignon, Bibliothèque Municipale, sept-oct
1997, [Paris], Direction du Livre et de la Culture, 1997, pp. 13-29.
|