Marie-Madeleine Guimard

Marie-Madeleine Guimard

Portrait of Madeleine Guimard (Paris, BNF)
Born 27 December 1743
Died 4 May 1816

Marie-Madeleine Guimard (27 December 1743,[1] Paris — 4 May 1816) was a French ballerina who dominated the Parisian stage during the reign of Louis XVI.[2] For twenty-five years she was the star of the Paris Opera. She made herself even more famous by her love affairs, especially by her long liaison with the Prince of Soubise. According to Edmond de Goncourt, when d'Alembert was asked why dancers like La Guimard made such prodigious fortunes, when singers did not, he responded, "It is a necessary consequence of the laws of motion".[3]

Characteristics of her dancing

Not known for hazarding the more difficult movements that were being added to the professional repertory of ballet, she was renowned for her perfectly composed and fluid aristocratic movements, her mime and above all for her expressively smiling visage. She wore her skirt hitched up to reveal an underskirt, without hoops or paniers, held out simply by a starched muslin petticoat.[4] The portrait painter Mme Vigée-Lebrun said, "her dancing was but a sketch; she made only petits pas, simple steps, but with movements so graceful that the public preferred her to every other dancer."[5] Other dancers, like Jean-Georges Noverre, praised her enthusiastically, but Sophie Arnould, who thought that she had more graceful gesture than true dancing talent, remarked, after a piece of scenery fell and broke her arm in January 1766, after which she continued to make public appearances gamely, her arm in a sling, "Poor Guimard! if she had only broken a leg! that would not have kept her from dancing."[6]

Biography

Mademoiselle Guimard as Terpsichore (Jacques-Louis David, 1773-1775)

She was the love child of Fabien Guimart and Anne Bernard, legitimated at a late date (December 1765), who had been trained by the great choreographer d'Harnoncourt, who had entered her at the age of fifteen among the corps de ballet of the Comédie-Française. After a first affair with the dancer Leger, which produced a child, she was engaged at the Opéra (1761) and made her debut, as Terpsichoré, 9 May 1762, and soon was seen dancing at Court. She was kept by a stream of highly placed admirers, including the gentleman composer Jean-Benjamin de La Borde, with whom she had a daughter in April 1763, and who always remained in her circle, even after she was finally taken up by Charles de Rohan, Prince de Soubise, a maréchal de France and great connoisseur of ballet dancers,[7] who settled on her, it was said, 2000 écus a month.

House at Pantin

In a career of hitherto unequaled luxury, she bought a magnificent house near Paris at Pantin,[8] and built a small private theater connected with it, where Collé's Partie de chasse de Henri IV which was prohibited in public,[9] most of the Proverbes of Carmontelle and similar licentious performances were given to the delight of high society.[10] In truth there were three dinner parties a week, according to Edmond de Goncourt, one for the grandest of grands seigneurs and those of the highest consideration at Court; a second composed of writers and artists and wits that all but rivaled the salon of Mme Geoffrin; and a third to which were invited all the most ravishing and lascivious young women, according to the Mémoires secrets attributed to Bachaumont.

At the same time, according to Baron Grimm, during the bitter cold spell in January 1768, she asked for her allowance in coins, and, without taking an entourage, climbed to all the garrets of her neighborhood at Pantin, giving purses of money, coats and warm bedclothes. Throughout her career, her open-hearted generosity disarmed the pamphleteers.

Among her admirers was Louis-Sextius de Jarente de La Bruyère, bishop of Orléans.[11]

Hôtel Guimard

Main article: Hôtel Guimard
Hôtel Guimard, by Ledoux, designed ca. 1766

In the early 1770s, in defiance of the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Paris, she opened the gorgeous hôtel Guimard in the Chaussée d'Antin designed by Claude-Nicolas Ledoux in the latest neoclassical taste, decorated with paintings by Fragonard, and with a theater seating five hundred spectators.[12] The house was almost finished March 1773 when Grimm's Correspondance littéraire reported the famous anecdote of Fragonard's revenge:La Guimard had quarreled with the painter, who had depicted her as Terpsichore in large panels of her salon, and found a substitute. Finding his way into the house unaccompanied, Fragonard picked up a palette of paints, and with a few deft touches transformed Mlle Guimard's Terpsichorean smile into a grimace of fury, without lessening in the least the likeness. When La Guimard arrived with an entourage and discovered it, the angrier she became, the more she represented the new portrait. In this Temple de Terpsichore, as she named it, the wildest orgies took place, according to her detractors. In 1786 she was compelled to get rid of the property, and it was disposed of by lottery for her benefit for the sum of 300,000 francs.

Her marriage and furniture

Soon after her retirement in 1789 she married Jean-Étienne Despréaux (1748–1820), a dancer, songwriter and playwright.

In 2009 the bed made for Guimard to a Louis XVI design by French visionary neoclassical architect Claude Nicolas Ledoux (1736–1806) as "the high altar of the temple of love,” as Alan Rubin, the gallery owner, said, was offered for sale by Pelham Galleries at the European Fine Arts Fair in Maastricht.[13]

Aside from her portrait at the Louvre Museum (illustration), several other Fragonard portrait drawings are conserved at the Musée des Beaux-Arts et d'archéologie de Besançon as well as a bust by Gaetano Muchi (1779)[14] is at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris.

See also

Notes

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  1. Born and baptised the same day, according to her baptismal record reported in Edmond de Goncourt, La Guimard: d'après les registres des menus-plaisirs, de la bibliothèque de l'Opéra, etc (Paris, 1893) p. 5. Goncourt's life is the source for virtually all the modern references.
  2. P. Migel, The Ballerinas, from the Court of Louis XIV to Pavlova, 1972.
  3. Edmond de Goncourt 1893, preface.
  4. Judith Chazin-Bennahum, The Lure of Perfection: fashion and Ballet, 1780-1830, (New York: Routledge), 2005.
  5. Quoted by Goncourt 1893, p.2 note 1.
  6. Goncourt 1893, p. 33 note 2.
  7. Goncourt (1893, p. 35f.) recalls the tradition that Soubise is intended in the drawing La petite loge by Moreau le Jeune for the Monument du Costume, in which a stage mother offers her daughter for inspection to a seigneur who takes her gently by the chin.
  8. The house had utterly disappeared by the end of the 19th century, but Edmond de Goncourt reported that Mme Delizy had reerected the painted boiseries of Mlle Guimard's two main salons in her hôtel particulier in Paris (Goncourt 1893 p. 53).
  9. A performance of it inaugurated Mme du Barry's Pavillon de Louveciennes, however.
  10. "Perhaps the most lavish sponsor of clandestine theatre was Marie- Madeleine Guimard, the so-called 'goddess of the dance,' adored star of the opera ballet." (K. Toepfer, "Orgy Salon: Aristocracy and Pornographic Theatre in Pre-Revolutionary Paris" Performing Arts Journal, 1990).
  11. Goncourt 1893, p. 68ff.
  12. R. Carter, "Claude Nicolas Le Doux: Architecture and Social Reform at the End of the Ancien Regime", Eighteenth-Century Studies, 1992.
  13. "The high altar of the temple of love", New York Times, 26 March 2009
  14. Reported by Everett Fahy to Francis Steegmuller (Steegmuller, A Woman, a Man, and Two Kingdoms: The Story ofMadame d'Épinay and the Abbé Galiani, (New York) 1991:258 note 2.

Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

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