Château de Versailles

Peter the Great, a Tsar in France. 1717

30 May 2017 24 September 2017 Exhibition Finished
From 30 May to 24 September 2017, the Grand Trianon will feature Peter the Great, a tsar in France, an exhibition commemorating the tercentenary of the Russian tsar's diplomatic visit to Paris and the surrounding area in May and June 1717. Thanks to an exceptional collaboration between the Palace of Versailles and the State Hermitage Museum, the exhibition presents more than 150 works - paintings, sculptures,...
Peter I (1672 - 1725) was born into the Romanov dynasty, the son of tsar Alexis Mikhaïlovich (1645 -1676) and Natalya Naryshkina (1651-1694). 20 years after the "Grand Embassy", which brought him to Europe for the first time in 1697-1698, Peter travelled again to the West. He reached France on 21 April 1717, where he stayed until 21 June. He travelled to Versailles on two occasions, from 24 -26 May and then again from 3 -11 June 1717, staying at the Grand Trianon. The exhibition traces this free-flowing journey step-by-step. Though ostensibly on an official visit, Peter I was an unpredictable force of nature who was largely a stranger to etiquette, flouting protocol on a number of occasions. His introduction to Louis XV in particular made a lasting impression: ignoring court ceremony, he lifted the seven-year-old child-king into his arms in a spontaneous gesture. We were able to retrace this voyage thanks in large part to the invaluable accounts of a number of memorialists, including Saint-Simon, the Marquis of Dangeau, and Jean Buvat. Though Peter's trip had political and economic objectives - such as an alliance with France against Sweden and the signature of a trade agreement - this reformist tsar, the founder of modern Russia, wanted above all to discover all that was most remarkable about France in order to adapt certain models to his empire. During the two months he spent in Paris under the Regency, his visits and discussions with the French influenced his thinking and shifted the direction of works he had initiated in Saint Petersburg and the surrounding area in 1703. While in Paris, Peter went to the Academy of Sciences, of which he became an honorary member, the Observatory, and the National Mint, where a medal was struck in his honour. The tsar also visited the Gobelins manufacture, which inspired the creation of a tapestry workshop in his new capital. He explored Parisian markets as a regular person, buying books as well as scientific and technical instruments. And as was customary, prestigious diplomatic gifts were also exchanged, such as the New Testament wall hanging given to Peter the Great, comprising four tapestries based on the work of Jouvenet, now housed at the State Hermitage Museum. The exhibition also highlights the tsar's relations with French artists. Indeed, as early as 1716, he attracted several masters to the Saint Petersburg court, including Louis Caravaque (1684-1754), the architect Jean- Baptiste Le Blond (1679-1719), and ornamental sculptor Nicolas Pineau. During Peter's stay in France in 1717, two famous artists, Jean-Marc Nattier (1685-1766) and Jean-Baptiste Oudry (1686-1755), painted his portrait. A warrior monarch who enjoyed travelling, Peter the Great criss-crossed the globe for close to four decades, from the White Sea to the Caspian Sea, from the Netherlands to Moldova, from England to Persia. In the view of posterity, this extraordinary figure became one of his country's most consequential monarchs, the creator of a new Russia.
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