2018年5月11日 星期五

Camille Pissarro, "Place du Carrousel, Paris," 1900,


What do you notice first about Camille Pissarro's "Place du Carrousel, Paris"? Pissarro's composition captures the restless activity of the busy city. His quick brushwork seems to mimic the action it depicts. Notice the wheels of the carriages and buggies, where scoured circles of paint trace motion. With the movement of his brush, Pissarro does not simply paint, but reenacts the rolling progress of the wheels.
Camille Pissarro, "Place du Carrousel, Paris," 1900, oil on canvas, National Gallery of Art, Washington, Ailsa Mellon Bruce Collection



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Place du Carrousel from the southern wing of the Louvre Palace. The Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel is on the left
The Place du Carrousel (ka-ru-zel) is a public square in the 1st arrondissement of Paris, located at the open end of the courtyard of the Louvre Palace, a space occupied, prior to 1883, by the Tuileries Palace. Sitting directly between the museum and the Tuileries Garden, the Place du Carrousel delineates the eastern end of the gardens just as the Place de la Concordedefines its western end.
The name "carrousel" refers to a type of military dressage, an equine demonstration now commonly called military drill. The Place du Carrousel was named in 1662, when it was used for such a display by Louis XIV.

History[edit]

A construction in the Place du Carrousel at the time, in 1745, of the marriage of Louis, Dauphin of France. Note the Tuileries Palace in the background.
On 5 October 1789, a mob from Paris descended upon Versailles and forced the royal family — Louis XVIMarie Antoinette, and their children, along with the comte de Provence (later king Louis XVIII), his wife, and Madame Elisabeth, the youngest sister of the king — to move to Paris under the watchful eye of the Garde Nationale. The king and queen were installed in the Tuileries Palace under surveillance. During this time, there were many plots designed to help members of the royal family escape from France. The queen rejected several because she would not leave without the king. Other opportunities to rescue the family were ultimately frittered away by the indecisive king. After many delays, the escape ultimately occurred on 21 June 1791, and it was a failure. The entire family was captured twenty-four hours later at Varennes and taken back to Paris within a week
On 20 June 1792, "a mob of terrifying aspect" broke into the Tuileries and made the king wear the bonnet rouge (red Phrygian cap) to show his loyalty to France.
The vulnerability of the king was exposed on 10 August of that year when an armed mob, on the verge of forcing its way into the Tuileries Palace, forced the king and the royal family to seek refuge at the Legislative Assembly. An hour and a half later, the palace was invaded by the mob. They massacred the Swiss Guards, who fought with blind dedication and desperation. Some seven hundred were killed, and their bloodied bodies decorated the yard in front of the palace (in the place then known as the Cours du Carrousel), in the gardens of the palace, and along the banks of the Seine. On 13 August, the royal family was imprisoned in the tower of the Temple in the Le Marais district, under conditions considerably harsher than their previous confinement in the Tuileries.
On 21 August 1792, the guillotine was erected in the Place du Carrousel, and it remained there, with two short interruptions, until 11 May 1793. In total, thirty-five people were guillotined there.
On 2 August 1793, at the former site of the guillotine, a wooden pyramid was constructed as a tribute to Jean-Paul Marat. It bore an inscription: "To the spirit of the late Marat, 13 July, year I. From his underground tomb, he still makes the traitors tremble. A treacherous hand thwarted the affections of the people." There was also an exhibit of the famous hip bath of Marat and his desk where some of his most impassioned polemics were drafted. These items stayed in place until 9 Thermidor Year II (28 July 1794).
During the revolution of 1848, the Tuileries Palace was looted and severely damaged by rioters. On 23 May 23, 1871, during the suppression of the Paris Commune, twelve men under the orders of a Communard, Dardelle, set the Tuileries on fire at seven in the evening, using petroleum, liquid tar, and turpentine. The fire lasted for forty-eight hours and entirely consumed the palace. The ruins of the Tuileries stood on the site for eleven years. In 1882, the French National Assembly voted for the demolition of the ruins, and, despite much contrary sentiment, this was accomplished in 1883. The salvageable remains of the building were sold to a private entrepreneur.
Once the palace had been cleared away, the ground, which had been known as the "Place du Carrousel" since 1662, could, once again, be used as a public square.

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卡魯索廣場(place du Carrousel)是法國巴黎的一個廣場,面對羅浮宮,得名於Carrousel。
1792年8月10日,卡魯索廣場作為杜伊勒里宮和羅浮宮之間的瓶頸地段,擠滿了來自巴黎各個角落的興奮的人群,守衛王宮的瑞士僱傭軍徒勞地盡忠職守,付出的代價是高昂的:大約700具屍體被遺棄在地上,庭院、附近的花園,和河堤到處血跡斑斑。拿破崙·波拿巴當時也在推翻君主的人群中,從這一恐怖的圖畫中得到了教訓:出於本能的仇恨的人。1792年8月21日,這裡安裝了斷頭台,到1793年5月11日,只有1792年10月13日偷盜王冠的盜賊,和1793年1月21日路易十六的死刑是在革命廣場(現為協和廣場)執行。 共有35人在此上斷頭台。1793年8月2日,在斷頭台遺址上安裝了一個木製的金字塔。
今日,卡魯索凱旋門主宰著這個廣場,但由於杜伊勒里宮在1883年消失,這裡變得比以往空曠。卡魯索凱旋門於1806年和1808年之間建成,充當進入杜伊勒里宮的名義上的入口。

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