Versailles. Fountain of Bacchus in the winter - Alexandre Benois
Archival giclée
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Description
A delicate watercolour by Alexandre Benois depicting the Fountain of Bacchus at Versailles during a quiet, wintry day.
Alexandre Benois, a central figure of the Mir Iskusstva (World of Art) movement, held a lifelong fascination with the formal gardens of Versailles. This watercolour captures the Fountain of Bacchus during the winter months, a period when the structural geometry of the grounds becomes more apparent than during the lush summer season. The composition is anchored by the central basin, where the bronze figure of Bacchus sits amidst rockwork, surrounded by the still, reflective water. Benois employs a restrained palette to convey the chill of the season. The bare, vertical trunks of the trees create a rhythmic, colonnade-like effect that draws the eye toward the horizon. His technique relies on delicate washes and precise ink lines, which define the skeletal branches against the pale sky. The reflection in the water provides a softened, inverted echo of the trees, adding a sense of quietude to the scene. Unlike the grand, celebratory depictions of the French court often found in historical art, this work focuses on the melancholy atmosphere of the gardens in repose. Benois was deeply interested in the history of the site, and his studies often reflect a personal, almost nostalgic connection to the architecture and statuary of the Ancien Régime. The work demonstrates his ability to balance architectural accuracy with a sensitive, atmospheric rendering of light and temperature. By stripping away the foliage, he reveals the underlying design of the park, allowing the viewer to appreciate the formal planning that defines the Versailles aesthetic. This piece is a characteristic example of his work, which frequently revisited the themes of eighteenth-century French classicism through a modern, early twentieth-century lens.
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Versailles. Fountain of Bacchus in the winter - Alexandre Benois
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Museum-grade giclée on FSC-certified archival matte paper, with framed and canvas options.
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Artist Biography
Alexandre Benois
Born in 1870 in St Petersburg into a family of architects and artists, Benois was largely self-taught after a brief, dissatisfying spell as an unregistered student at the Academy of Arts. He studied law at university and educated himself through trips to Italy, Spain, and France. By the 1890s he was Russia's pre-eminent art critic, and in 1898 he co-founded the journal Mir iskusstva (World of Art) with Sergei Diaghilev, backed by Princess Tenisheva and the industrialist Savva Mamontov. The journal opposed the didactic social realism of the Peredvizhniki and insisted that Russian art engage seriously with European modernism.
As a painter, Benois worked primarily in watercolour and gouache until 1905. His Russian history series of 1907-10, commissioned by publisher Iosif Knoebel, depicted Petrine and Catherinian court life with careful archival precision; his three editions of illustrations for Pushkin's Bronze Horseman (1903, 1905, 1916-22) remain defining images of the poem. Theatre absorbed him most fully. He wrote the libretto for Stravinsky's Petrouchka (1911), designed the first Ballets Russes Paris season, and headed the Moscow Arts Theatre's art production section from 1913 to 1915.
From 1918 to 1926 he directed the Picture Gallery at the Hermitage, a formidable institutional role through years of revolutionary upheaval. He left Russia permanently in 1926, settling in Paris the following year, and spent his final decades producing more than sixty theatre and opera productions across La Scala, the Paris Opéra, and major houses in London and New York. He died in Paris in February 1960.
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