Paris Tours

Tuesday 13 February 2024

1:30-3:00 pm

The Regency in Paris (1715-1723). The Dawn of Enlightenment.

A tour of the exhibition at the Musée Carnavalet, Paris

(until 25 February 2024)

With Chris Boïcos


Please note this tour is limited to a maximum of 18 participants

Louis XIV died on the first of September 1715 in Versailles leaving behind as heir his great-grandson, Louis XV, a child of five, too young to reign. On 2 September, the duc Philippe d’Orléans (1674-1723), the young King’s uncle, assumed the Regency of the kingdom. The court, the government, the nobility and the young King abandoned Versailles for Paris.

 

In this crucial transitional period between the death of the Great King and that of the Regent in 1723 everything seems to have changed in Paris. The Regent’s residence at the Palais-Royal now became the center of power and fashion. A flurry of monumental mansions were built by the nobility, particularly on the Left Bank opposite the Tuileries palace, leading to a revolution in interior decoration and furniture styles. Theater, luxury and the conspicuous consumption of all expensive pleasures overtook Paris society, newly enriched by the founding of a stock exchange, a royal bank, paper notes and a company (compagnie des Indes) to exploit the new crown colony in America – Louisiana – whose capital, New Orleans, was named after the Regent.

 

Our tour will take in the dozens of fascinating paintings, engravings, furniture, documents and a beautiful selection of the drawings of Antoine Watteau that illustrate this sophisticated period, which also witnessed the emergence of some the key intellectual and cultural figures of the French Enlightenment: Voltaire, Marivaux, Montesquieu, Law, Watteau…

Antoine Watteau, The Guitar Player, c. 1717-18 Rouen, musée des Beaux-Arts
Antoine Watteau, The Guitar Player, c. 1717-18 Rouen, musée des Beaux-Arts


Date: Tuesday 13 February 2024

Time: 1:15 for 1:30pm entry. Tour ends at 3:00 pm.

Place: Lobby of the musée Carnavalet just past the ticket counters. 23 rue de Sevigné 75003 Paris.

Metro: Saint-Paul (line 1)

Ticket: You can buy your ticket on the day or a timed ticket online

Please note this tour is limited to a maximum of 18 participants



 

The Musée Carnavalet

The Musée Carnavalet is the museum of the history of Paris.

It was founded in 1866 during the often destructive modernization of Paris launched by Napoleon III and Baron Haussmann

to preserve - paradoxically – elements of Parisian architecture and historic interiors saved from demolition.

 

The museum re-opened in 2021 after five years of extensive renovations with vastly expanded premises for its collections and an entirely new underground section.

 

Recorded Zoom lectures on the meseum's collection

with Chris Boïcos:

 

Musée Carnavalet
Musée Carnavalet


Paris under the Bourbons 1 

in the collections of Musée Carnavalet

 

Paris under the Bourbons 2

in the collections of Musée Carnavalet

Paris and the French Revolution, 1789-1799

In the Collections of Musée Carnavalet