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Musee Jacquemart-Andre
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When the Louvre and the Musee dOrsay are on
strike or closed for a national holiday, is there any place to visit in Paris besides the
Luxembourg Gardens and the Eiffel Tower? Yes, indeed there is, and whats more
its the kind of place that is both awesomely beautiful and delightfully
entertaining. Now thats a tall order for an art museum, but then again, since the
Jacquemart-Andre Museum was refurbished and brought back to life five years ago,
its been the talk of the international art world. And even those die-hard Parisians
who have never stepped foot into the Louvre love the Jacquemart, if only because it boasts
the only restaurant where you can eat beneath an original Tiepolo ceiling.
A house-museum, whose five thousand works of art and antiquities range
from the Lower and Upper Egyptian Kingdoms to the Italian Quattrocentro to the Dutch
School of Old Master painting and the Rococo of Boucher, Fragonard and Greuze, the
Jacquemart-Andre is in a class by itself. The sumptuous edifice, built in 1869 by the
architect Henri Parent (second runner-up after Charles Garnier to the Paris Opera) was
commissioned by Edouard Andre, the sole heir to a colossal banking fortune. It was so
colossal that in 1871, he and the Baron Rothschild ponied upin a single week--5
billion francs in gold as a war indemnity to Bismarck, a payoff that prevented the
Prussian armys occupation of Paris. Andre had at his disposal twice the annual art
budget of the Louvre.
Although he was a Bonapartist and a one-time member of the Imperial
Guards, after the defeat of France in the Franco-Prussian War, Andre retired from public
life to amass one of the greatest art collections in France, prepare the museum that would
one day become the Museum of Decorative Arts (second only to the Victoria & Albert in
London), and publish the Gazette des Beaux-Arts, still the worlds most
prestigious art publication.
There is no doubt that he was a dashing and handsome man-about-town
who, like many of his class, led the life of a cosmopolitan roue, much to his
familys distress. By 1881, they made it clear that it was high time that he settle
down, particularly since he was plagued by the gout. They were soon to become even more
distressed, when instead of proposing to a socially and financially endowed heiress, he
chose instead, a self-made woman, a portrait painter, named Nelie Jacquemart, whose
father had been a steward on the country estate of one of the wealthiest widows in France,
Rose de Vatry. The childless Rose had taken Nelie under her wing. Recognizing her
protegees artistic talent, Rose sent her to study first with Leon Cogniet in Paris
and later in Rome at the Villa Medicis. (The Ecole des Beaux-Arts was closed to women
until after World War One).
Nelie began earning her way at 19, drawing for LIllustration,
one the leading weeklies of the time, and later, dedicating her talents mainly to making
society portraits of the Orleanist aristocracy which made up the social sphere of Madame
de Vatry. Oddly enough, she had painted her future husbands portrait in 1872, a work
that now hangs in the boudoir where the couple took breakfast and tea.
By the time Edouard Andre proposed, Nelie was close to forty, had a
flourishing artistic career and a handsome establishment of her own. Yet, as independent
as she was, she must have been tempted by the prospect of a blank check that would permit
her to make The Grand Tour at least six months of the year, and bring back a staggering
array of objects, the finest that money could buy at the time. In fact, crates of antiques
from abroad continued to arrive several months after her death.
A visit to the museum demonstrates that Edouard was most astute in his
choice of bride, for without her artistic knowledge, he would never have amassed the
collection of Italian Renaissance paintings and sculptures by Botticelli, Uccello,
Mantegna and Bellini. Moreover, it was at her behest that he built up a stunning
collection of Old Masters, including paintings by Rembrandt and Van Dyck, and an
unforgettable portrait, Man in Gray, by Frans Hals, painted when he was
eighty-years-old.
Although the Andre mansion was complete when Nelie moved in, the
excellent audioguide reveals how the house changed in layout and design during their
marriage. The upstairs galleryintended to be Nelies studiowas arranged
to hold their Italian treasures, and Nelies original sleeping quarters were
changed, so that she could be closer to her increasingly infirm husband. Of course, it was
she was responsible for handling all tradesmen, painters, cabinetmakers and art dealers,
no small feat at a time when women were still regarded as chattel.
Andre must have been grateful because he made her his sole heir, which
allowed her to travel to the Far East and amass an exceptional collection of Indian and
Oriental antiquities and furnishings. She in turn, abided by the wishes of his will,
continuing to enrich the collection of the Jacquemart-Andre Museum so that it is now one
of the great showplaces of the world. Thanks
to private management, visitors can now eat Botticelli and Uccello salads under a Tiepolo
ceiling, in which the artist and his pet monkey look down fondly at their new slew of
admirers. Happily satiated with art, French food and wine, its not hard to imagine
that the host and hostess, Edouard and Nelie, are still in residence.
January 17, 2002 - Rachel Kaplan