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Episode 4 : Marie-Antoinette et ses enfants par Vigée-Lebrun

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    Art...
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    ArtSleuth
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    A child
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    another,
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    and a third
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    with their mother in the centre.
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    A painting by Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun.
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    Just another saccharine hymn to family values?
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    But it isn’t all sweetness and light:
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    this may be a palace, but it’s empty and cold
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    a sombre curtain shrouds the cradle
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    there are shadows creeping in…
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    This woman is Marie-Antoinette, last queen of France.
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    She has seven years to live:
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    When the Revolution triumphs, she will die on the guillotine…
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    She knows already that the people hate her.
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    This picture is a last attempt at image-building.
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    An attempt which fails!
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    But how about the picture - is it a failure too?
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    Is it mere propaganda - or is it something more?
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    Episode 4: Vigee Lebrun
    *Marie-Antoinette and her children - From PR exercise to guillotine?*
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    Part 1: Painting as PR
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    Let there be no mistake,
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    this glossy picture is a PR exercise.
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    Its aim - to make people forget three damaging visions of the Queen u
    nwittingly projected in earlier portraits.
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    Mark I: *Frivolous fashion-freak*.
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    The bold, actressy pose,
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    with stage curtain and smoke as background,
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    the knick-knacks, the frills,
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    the outlandish wigs...
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    all gone!
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    With a pedestal-type cushion at her feet,
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    Seated on an armchair in austere surroundings,
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    and a classical column
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    in the background,
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    the Queen again becomes a figure of authority.
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    Mark II: *Wayward shepherdess.*.
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    Tired of her royal duties,
    Marie-Antoinette turns her back on the palace
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    and escapes to her toy-like village at the* Trianon.*.
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    “Straw hat and plain English muslin
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    - perfect for a pleasant stroll.
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    And just what all my friends are wearimg!”
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    Buta queen who shows herself like this in public is insulting the people
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    - and France!
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    So - back to the splendours of Versailles
    and Louis XIV’s *Hall of Mirrors.*
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    Crown,
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    fleur de lys
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    - this is indeed a queen of France.
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    Back to the regulation red-velvet dress.**
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    The colour of power
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    and a discreet nod
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    to her simple, pious predecessor.
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    Mark III: *Queen of diamonds. *
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    She loves jewellery, and everyone knows it.
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    Indeed, one schemer has already used her name
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    to mount a massive scam
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    - the *“Queen’s Necklace Affair”. *.
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    The Queen’s innocence is proved, but the mud sticks all the same.
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    So, austerity’s the word
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    - no necklace, no diamonds.
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    A clever move.
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    The portrait goes on show in Paris.
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    But it’s *too late*:
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    the people no longer trust the monarchy.
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    The state is backing the Americans in their fight for independence,
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    Deeply in debt,
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    it is staring ruin in the face.
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    Millions, who have lent it their money, fear the worst.
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    Known for her extravagance, the Queen makes an easy scapegoat:
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    “Madame Deficit”, “the Austrian woman”, is accused of deliberately seeking to ruin France.
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    To win back the people’s favour, she tries a new approach**
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    -and plays her role as mother to the hilt.
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    Part 2: *The might of motherhood*
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    A queen as mother
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    - nothing new, surely!
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    After all, giving French kings an heir is what French queens are there for.
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    Her predecessor as queen, is a mere *biological bridge *between:
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    her husband, the present king,
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    and her son, the future one.
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    And her mother embodies the same tradition at the Austrian court,
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    as she proudly displays the little princes,
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    who are actually shown *as miniature adults *in their own right.
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    But there’s something new here:
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    for one thing, *the triangular composition *...
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    … comes from Italian Renaissance paintings of the Holy Family:
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    the* sacred* is back.
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    There’s something else too, something more modern:
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    a real bond of affection between mother and children ...
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    ... who are dressed to suit their needs - not a wig or sword in sight.
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    The guiding light here is the philosopher, Jean-Jacques Rousseau,
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    who urges mothers to abandon their loose-living ways
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    - and play a worthy role in society
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    by raising their children to be enlightened citizens.
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    The reference point here is Cornelia, the virtuous Roman matron,
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    who scorned jewellery,
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    and declared that her children were her greatest treasure.
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    Which helps to explain why this jewel cabinet
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    stays firmly in the shadows,
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    while the children are presented to the nation.
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    Embodying both *sacred *and *civic *ideals of motherhood,
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    the Queen *scores twice over*!
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    But maternal feeling has its modish side too:
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    many ladies of fashion are happy enough to be painted with their children ...
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    ... but leave all the rest to nurses.
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    The public suspect that Marie-Antoinette is one of them,
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    and focus instead on one melancholy detail:
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    the empty cradle!
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    ... intended for the little Princess Sophie,
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    who died before the picture was finished.
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    Will viewers feel for her mother?
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    No: the expression doesn’t fit
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    - she looks unconcerned,
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    and seems to have her mind on something else.
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    In short, she is a *bad mother*.
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    An argument taken up seven years later by the judges in the revolutionary tribunal,
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    who even accuse her of incest.
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    So the Queen’s plan collapses: the picture will not save her.
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    But what about saving the picture?
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    Part 3: *Prosperity - and posterity*
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    Of course, the artist Vigée-Lebrun is working to a royal commission,
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    and has to play down the very thing
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    that has made her fame and fortune
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    the all-new package she offers her sitters.
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    Not content to retouch their physical flaws,
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    she even arranges their costumes and hairstyles herself.
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    conventional dress codes are out,
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    and an easy elegance lets natural beauty shine through.
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    Above all, she encourages them to reveal their *private selves *
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    - to smile,
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    behave naturally,
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    and let their softer side show through.
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    And so the picture will live for other reasons
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    - reasons which apply in the 19th century
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    Long gone the haughty monarchs of the past -
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    today’s royal portraits must please the conventional, well-to-do burghers
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    and reflect their moral values
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    The good mother comes to symbolise political rectitude.
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    Queen Victoria, the century’s most powerful woman, is a typical example.
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    The French, too, choose a nursing mother
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    - Marianne - to symbolise the Republic**
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    And, less than a century after they were painted, Vigée-Lebrun’s versions of Marie-Antoinette
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    no longer seem at odds with one another.
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    The Queen is remembered, not only as mother, but also for her special creation
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    - the high life, Trianon-style, blending the refined and bucolic.
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    In her day, easy-living luxury was seen as a sign of *depravity *
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    - and as such incompatible with motherhood.
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    In the 19th century, however, it became part of the duty her successors owed their country’s economy:
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    the Empress Eugénie, for example - an exemplary mother, seen here with her ladies-in-waiting
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    - helped to boost French fashion sales world-wide.
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    And so this portrait marks the start of a new era,
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    when public opinion can no longer be ignored
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    by royals - or their painters. **
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    Next episode: Rembrandt - *The Return of the Prodigal Son*
    *Force of the Dark Side*
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    Find more information on: www.canal-educatif.fr
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    Directed by
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    Produced by:
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    Written by
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    This film exists thanks to
    sponsors and volunteers
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    and to the support of the Palace of Versailles
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    Voicover
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    Editing and motion graphics
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    Extra editing & sound recording
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    Musical selection
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    Musics
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    Photographic credits
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    Special thanks
    English subtitles: Vincent Nash
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    A CED production
Title:
Episode 4 : Marie-Antoinette et ses enfants par Vigée-Lebrun
Video Language:
French

English subtitles

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