""The Palace of Verseilles Mirror" in The Complete fine art works of World of Art Award winning artist Asbjorn Lonvig, Denmark."
Asbjorn Lonvig
Original ink on canvas. 210 prints numbered and signed on Hahnemühle Museum Etching 350gsm paper - 33 Inches x 23 Inches
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Asbjorn Lonvig's words: Inspired by the mirror of the Palace of Verseilles in the ponds in front of it. You have to see the term "Mirror" in both a figurative sence and in a non-figurative sense. On the one hand I am inspired. Inspired by all this extravagance. On the other hand I despite it. In the two ponds at Parterre l'Eau I can see the Palace in a mirror. In this mirror I see extravagance. Extravagance is no way beautifull - the mirror of extravagance is? Mirors, mirrors, mirrors. This palace is famous for its hall of mirrors. The Hall of Mirrors. Wikipedia's words: The Palace of Versailles, or in French: le Château de Versailles, which has been on UNESCO’s World Heritage List for 30 years, is one of the most beautiful achievements of 18th-century French art. The site began as Louis XIII’s hunting lodge before his son Louis XIV transformed and expanded it, moving the court and government of France to Versailles in 1682. Each of the three French kings who lived there until the French Revolution added improvements to make it more beautiful. The Hall of Mirrors, the King’s Grand Apartments, the Museum of the History of France. The Château de Versailles, the seat of power until 1789, has continued to unfurl its splendour over the course of centuries. At first it was just a humble hunting lodge built by Louis XIII. But Louis XIV chose the site to build the palace we know today, the symbol of royal absolutism and embodiment of classical French art. In the 1670s Louis XIV built the Grand Apartments of the King and Queen, whose most emblematic achievement is the Hall of Mirrors designed by Mansart, where the king put on his most ostentatious display of royal power in order to impress visitors. The Chapel and Opera were built in the next century under Louis XV. UNESCO's words: The Palace of Versailles was the principal residence of the French kings from the time of Louis XIV to Louis XVI. Embellished by several generations of architects, sculptors, decorators and landscape architects, it provided Europe with a model of the ideal royal residence for over a century.
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