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Showing posts with label 'German Rococo style'. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 'German Rococo style'. Show all posts

Monday, 1 February 2021

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf (Germany)
Rococo castle interior

This blog entry about Castle Benrath is a translation made possible by  www.deepl.com . 
The original text you can find on my Dutch Woodcarving Blog, Ornamentsnijder Blog.

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis
SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf


If you drive in the direction of Wuppertal (Bergisches Land), the city of Benrath, which used to be a small hamlet but has been a part of Düsseldorf since 1929, is located right bank of the river Rhine.

To the northwest at the end of the main street in Benrath lies the hunting and pleasure castle "Maison de Plaisance" in Rococo style with a vast park of the former Elector of the Palatinate Charles Theodore of Bavaria (1724 -1799). Karel Theodoor initially resided in Mannheim, capital of the Palatinate.
Between 1755 and 1771 he had a new summer residence built in the Rococo style in Benrath under the direction of the court architect Nicolas de Pigage.
When Charles Theodoor became Elector of Bavaria in 1777, he moved his main residence to Munich. In the summer he resided in Schwetzingen Castle, built by his uncle Charles Philip.
Charles Thedodoor and his wife Elisabeth Auguste made hardly any use of this castle. At the inauguration there was an evening party and Karel Theodoor visited the castle once on a day trip.

Elector: The elector was one of the seven, later one of the nine, most prominent princes of the Holy Roman Empire, and only they were allowed to choose a new emperor.

The domain stretches as far as the banks of the Rhine. The outbuildings of the castle are home to several museums. The castle is almost a smaller version of Schwetzingen castle.
The Schlosscafé is located in one of the gatehouses. Before we started the tour we couldn't resist to have something to eat here. A good price quality with friendly service.

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

Schloss Benrath is a particularly charming castle that survived the turbulent after years of World War II almost unharmed. In the spring of 2019 I visited the castle with a number of students. 

The castle can only be visited with a guide. Every hour a small group of people leave for a guided tour of one of the wings of the castle; a visit that takes about an hour.
The entrance fee was not too high as in many German castles, castles and palaces, and amounted to p.p. 10 Euro. ( 12,5 US Dollar) 
Also here are the oversized felt slippers available. These slippers are required to wear over your own footwear to protect the original floors from possible damage.  Photographing is allowed but without flash. Here we have also gratefully taken advantage of the opportunity.
Below is a short report by Schloss Benrath.

The route to the castle is clearly indicated and parking is in the park and free of charge.


Castle Benrath

The Corps de Logis is the main building of the castle which consists of five separate buildings.
The main building served as a royal residence and has four floors with a total of eighty rooms.
The two wings to the right and left of the main building (Corps de Logis) are symmetrically located on the pond and were used as service buildings. They are connected to the main building by underground corridors. In this way, the work of the service staff was hidden from view and the meals could also be brought dry to the main building. In the two side wings there are now two museums, the museum of physics and the museum of garden art. The two gatehouses on both sides guard the entrances to the domain.

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis


The Vestibule

The vestibule, the festive entrance, connects the inner space with the outside through the artful plasterwork. The rooms above the doors represent the four seasons and the elements earth, water, air and fire have been installed on the large wall surfaces.
The theme of nature constantly appears in the interior and exterior decoration of the castle. The idea of 'the castle as a summer residence in the countryside' is touched upon time and again. The vestibule not only served as a reception area, but also as a dining room. The original tables in this room make this clear to us.

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis



The dome hall

The dome room is the banquet hall of the castle. Here people celebrated and danced. At the very top, even higher than the second dome, in the turret, also called the lantern, was the orchestral space. The dome depicts a painted scene, the goddess Diana returning from her nocturnal hunt. The fact that hunting is the main theme of the castle can also be seen in the decoration on the ground floor with the numerous animals killed, hunting dogs, hunting towers, safety nets,... Three windows show us the surrounding nature. The two official entrances to the Electors' Apartments can be accessed from the domed hall. Above these (private) doors are the initials of the prince electors "CT" and "FA" who "point the way" to their personal apartments.

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

The garden room

The Electress garden room is the first private living space. We can see that the cool marble floor has just turned into a warm parquet floor. The beautifully elaborated parquet pattern, the location of the doors, the windows and the mirror were conceived with attention to symmetrical and geometric principles that played an important role in the 18th century.
Optical deception and illusions were also part of this. The two opposite mirrors create the impression of infinite spaces.

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

Electress bedroom

The bedroom of the Electress is the first room in this tour which is covered with silk wallpaper, a special form of comfort. The bed stood in a niche that could be closed with hinged doors. Drawings and travel reports give us proof that the Electoress had a bed made for this in the form of a folded shell.
To the left and right of the niche there are hidden doors in the wallpaper. Behind it are small rooms that were used as a dressing room and make-up room, reading room and craft room. From there one could reach the Electoral Bathroom on one side and the toilet on the other side, a little bit dart was very modern in the 18th century.

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

The Order Room (service room)

The Cabinet is the last room in the Electress living space. It was used for writing, a door hidden in the wallpaper gave access to the Order Room or service room of the Electress, the living room for the chambermaid. Here she could, among other things, adjust her clothes and spend the night. The next room was probably used as a cloakroom, if we look at the many wall cabinets. In this room there is a portrait of the French architect Nicolas de Pigage. Schloss Benrath is considered to be his architectural masterpiece.

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis


The upper floor

On the upper floor there are four luxuriously furnished living rooms for senior guests. Each apartment had, according to French tradition, three rooms, an antechamber, a bedroom and a cabinet. The apartments were each occupied by one person. The servants stayed in adjoining rooms. There is also a cap on this floor, which was only allowed to be entered by the Electors and their guests. From a gallery, the house staff could follow the church service strictly separated from the nobility.

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

Here are some more impressions of our visit 
at Schloss Benrath near Düsseldorf


SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis

SCHLOSS BENRATH | Castle in Düsseldorf | Rococo castle interior | Rococo-style ornaments | Corps de Logis


https://www.patrickdamiaens.info


Sunday, 3 July 2016

Hunting lodge FALKENLUST in Brühl, Germany | German Rococo interiors | Schloss Falkenlust near Cologne


Hunting lodge FALKENLUST in Brühl, Germany

Hunting lodge FALKENLUST in Brühl


German Rococo interiors 
Schloss Falkenlust near Cologne


A blogentry from this site:

Already for many years I occasionally go with a few students ornamental woodcarving on a fieldtrip. Château Versailles is one of the places where they are looking the most forward to, but this time I have chosen for some beautiful German destinations. 
End of June (2016), it seemed to be a good idea to visit the castles of Brühl, 'Augustusburg Palace and Falkenlust hunting lodge'. Two fine examples of German Rococo with breathtaking Rococo interiors. These two castles are located not so  far from the Belgian border near Cologne. From my hometown Maaseik (in Belgium) it is 1:15h by car.


Hunting lodge Falkenlust

The Prince Elector and Archbishop of Cologne, clemens August (1700-1761), a member of the Bavarian Wittelsbach dynasty, laid the foundation stone for 'Schloss Falkenlust' in 1729. The main reasons for his choice of the site were its beauty and its favourable position for falconry. 
The basic floor-plan and elevations of the main building, and its overall concept, can be attributet to François de Cuvilliés, and the interiors to Michael Leveilly. The hunting lodge was ready for use as early as 1733.


Falkenlust Castle, garden side



Hunting lodge FALKENLUST in Brühl, Germany


A walk trough Falkenlust

The entrance from the courtyard leads into the vestiule. In the niches are statues of nymphes and satyrs, probably by Kirchhoff and Dierix. The nymphs bear symbols of falconry, and the satyrs appear as guardians of the herons which are important for falconry as quarry. In the ceilling: The coat oa arms of Clemens August.

Proceed straight ahead into the salon. The wall covering consists of Dutch wall-tiles from Rotterdam. Above the fireplace is a painting of Clemens August in the uniform of a falconer. The other paintings on the walls show members of the Wittelsbach family.
To the right is the dining room. The wainscoting paintings: Biarelle, around 1745. The plasterwork decoration of the ceilling: Morsegno and Castelli, around 1733. Above the fireplace is a painting of Karl albrecht, the brother of Clemens August and Prince Elector of Bavaria (born in 1697 and crowned as Emperor Karl VII in 1742, died in 1745). The furniture includes two card-tables in coloured scagliola marble.


Falkenlust Brühl

German Rococo interiors |  Schloss Falkenlust near Cologne

To the left of the salon is the (guest's) bedroom, with a ceilling by Castelli and Morsegno, around 1733. Above the fireplace: a painting of Maria Arnalia, the wife of Karl Albrecht.
Return through the vestibule and walk to the right. 
The wardrobe has a wall-covering in leather and dates from 1745. On the side opposite the window, there is a toilet niche behind the right-hand door.


Continue straight ahead, and you will come to the Lacquer Cabinet, which has wooden wainscoting with a lacquer painting of Chinese motifs, sometimes reffered to as Indian. 
Above the fireplace is a portrait of Clemens August in aristocratic dresing gown ( Joseph Vivien, 1725). The ceilling decoration: Artario 1733.



Falkenlust Brühl, Lacquer Cabinet

Returning through the vestibule, you will arrive at the staircase. The walls are covered by more than 10000 dutch tiles from Rotterdam, specially produced for Schloss Falkenlust. They display the Bavarian coat of arms colours of white and blue with initials C.A. on falcon hoods and varous other motifs relating to falconry. The ceilling decoration: Castelli and Morsegno, around 1732, the ceilling painting Laurents de la Roque, 1736.




The upper Apartment


Upper vestibule: 
In the niches: angelic figures (Putti) with falcons and herons. The plinths on which the groups of figures stand show the four Elements (artists: Dierix and Le Clerc, following a model by van Helmont, around 1733). Above the doors are stucco bas-relief figures of a river god and two river goddesses. The ceilling painting shows Aurora and Diana personifying the morning and the evening.

Upper Vestibule, Falkenlust


To the right is the Grand upper Salon, stucco work by Morsegno, 1731/32.
On the right-hand side of the salon is the Cabinet Chinois pour le Café.
The ceiling decoration: Castelli and Morsegno, 1733. Above the fireplace: a portrait of Johann Theodor, Cardinal of Liège and brother of Clemens August, in the uniform of a falconer.
On the left-hand side of the Salon is the bedroom, with a ceiling decoration by Castelli and Morsegno, 1731. In the corners are respresentations of good and bad falconers with their birds. In the middle of the ceiling is a personification of night, in a star-spangled mantle and bat wings, accompanied by bats. A small putto shows the morning star.

German Rococo interiors |  Schloss Falkenlust near Cologne

The portrait above the fireplace is of Clemens August's brother Ferdinand Maria, Duke of Bavaria.
On the wall opposite the windows is a painting of Pope Clements by Georg Desmarées.
Return through the Vestibule, and turn to the right.
Wardrobe with a wall covering in waxcloth, around 1730-40. Continue straight ahead to the mirror Cabinet, mainly designed by Cuvillliés. 
The ceilling decoration is by Artario. This room is mainly furnished with Chinese porselain. The cabinet is given particular mention in the diary of the young Moart, who visited Schloss Falkenlust in 1763.

German rococo, Falkenlust |  The Mirror Cabinet

The Chapel is located outside in the park. It is built in the style of a grotto and took ten years to its completitaion. It was dedicated to Maria aegyptiaca in 1740. The interior is the work of Peter Laporterie.

Schloss Falkenlust, the Chapel

Falkenlust | The interior of the chapel, in the style of a grotto



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