top of page

Этот стиль возник во Франции  в первой половине XVIII века (во время регентства Филиппа Орлеанского) как развитие барокко. Характерными чертами рококо являются изысканность, большая декоративная нагруженность интерьеров и композиций, грациозный орнаментальный ритм, большое внимание к мифологии, личному комфорту. Наивысшее развитие в архитектуре стиль получил в Баварии.

 

Архитектурный (точнее — декоративный) стиль рококо появился во Франции во времена регентства (1715—1723) и достиг апогея при Людовике XV, перешёл в другие страны Европы и господствовал в ней до 1780-х годов.

 

Веяние рококо в России особенно сильно проявилось в середине XVIIIX века, главным образом в отделке дворцовых интерьеров и лепном декоре зданий. Разница в развитии стияля в Европе и России были весьма ощутимы: Людовик XIV в 1662 году начал строительство Версаля, а в Петербурге в 1710 году появился Петергоф. Дворец в Ораниенбауме выполнен именно в этом архитектурном стиле, его называли «Каменным домом», а сегодня здесь располагается музей «Дворец Петра Третьего».

 

Покровительницей стиля в России была королева Елизавета Петровна, которая росла среди двух культур – европейской и российской. В стиле рококо выполнена отделка Андреевской церкви в Киеве: большой купол окружен четырьмя малыми. Также в стиле рококо была построена новая усыпальница для мощей Александра Невского. Андреевский собор (г. Киев), 1749—1754 гг. Непревзойденный шедевр елизаветинского рококо, один из красивейших храмов Украины.

 

Придворным архитектором в тот период был Растрелли-младший, который в полной мере разделял пристрастие царицы. Сооружения рококо появились в Петербурге, Петергофе, а также Царском Селе. Елизаветинское рококо - интерьер Китайского дворца в Ораниенбауме.

 

Летняя резиденция королевы была построена в итальянском стиле, с французскими и рокайльными элементами. Во внутренней отделке дворца было использовано сразу несколько цветов, самые качественные итальянские ткани, позолота, цветочные орнаменты и узоры, характерные для русского народного стиля.

Rococo in architecture

Rococo, less commonly roccoco, also referred to as "Late Baroque", is an 18th-century artistic movement and style, which affected several aspects of the arts including painting, sculpture, architecture, interior design, decoration, literature, music and theatre. The Rococo developed in the early part of the 18th century in Paris, France as a reaction against the grandeur, symmetry and strict regulations of the Baroque, especially that of the Palace of Versailles. In such a way, Rococo artists opted for a more jocular, florid and graceful approach to Baroque art and architecture. Rococo art and architecture in such a way was ornate and made strong usage of creamy, pastel-like colours, asymmetrical designs, curves and gold. Unlike the more politically focused Baroque, the Rococo had more playful and often witty artistic themes. With regards to interior decoration, Rococo rooms were designed as total works of art with elegant and ornate furniture, small sculptures, ornamental mirrors, and tapestry complementing architecture, reliefs, and wall paintings.

 

Towards the end of the 18th century, Rococo started to fall out of fashion, and it was largely supplanted by the Neoclassic style. In 1835 the Dictionary of the French Academy stated that the word Rococo "usually covers the kind of ornament, style and design associated with Louis XV's reign and the beginning of that of Louis XVI". It includes therefore, all types of art produced around the middle of the 18th century in France. The word Rococo is seen as a combination of the French rocaille, meaning stone, and coquilles, meaning shell, due to reliance on these objects as motifs of decoration. The term Rococo may also be interpreted as a combination of the Italian word "barocco" (an irregularly shaped pearl, possibly the source of the word "baroque") and the French "rocaille" (a popular form of garden or interior ornamentation using shells and pebbles), and may be used to describe the refined and fanciful style that became fashionable in parts of Europe during the eighteenth century. Owing to Rococo love of shell-like curves and focus on decorative arts, some critics used the term to derogatively imply that the style was frivolous or merely modish. When the term was first used in English in about 1836, it was a colloquialism meaning "old-fashioned". As a matter of fact, the style received harsh criticism, and was seen by some to be superficial and of poor taste, especially when compared to neoclassicism; despite this, it has been praised for its aesthetic qualities, and since the mid-19th century, the term has been accepted by art historians. While there is still some debate about the historical significance of the style to art in general, Rococo is now widely recognized as a major period in the development of European art.

 

Solitude Palace in Stuttgart and Chinese Palace in Oranienbaum, the Bavarian church of Wies and Sanssouci in Potsdam are examples of how Rococo made its way into European architecture.

 

In those Continental contexts where Rococo is fully in control, sportive, fantastic, and sculptured forms are expressed with abstract ornament using flaming, leafy or shell-like textures in asymmetrical sweeps and flourishes and broken curves; intimate Rococo interiors suppress architectonic divisions of architrave, frieze, and cornice for the picturesque, the curious, and the whimsical, expressed in plastic materials like carved wood and above all stucco (as in the work of the Wessobrunner School). Walls, ceiling, furniture, and works of metal and porcelain present a unified ensemble. The Rococo palette is softer and paler than the rich primary colors and dark tonalities favored in Baroque tastes. Integrated rococo carving, stucco and fresco at Zwiefalten.

 

A few anti-architectural hints rapidly evolved into full-blown Rococo at the end of the 1720s and began to affect interiors and decorative arts throughout Europe. The richest forms of German Rococo are in Catholic Germany (illustration, above).

 

Rococo plasterwork by immigrant Italian-Swiss artists like Bagutti and Artari is a feature of houses by James Gibbs, and the Franchini brothers working in Ireland equalled anything that was attempted in Great Britain.

 

Inaugurated in some rooms in Versailles, it unfolds its magnificence in several Parisian buildings (especially the Hôtel Soubise). In Germany, French and German artists (Cuvilliés, Neumann, Knobelsdorff, etc.) effected the dignified equipment of the Amalienburg near Munich, and the castles of Würzburg, Potsdam, Charlottenburg, Brühl, Bruchsal, Solitude (Stuttgart), and Schönbrunn.

 

In Great Britain, one of Hogarth's set of paintings forming a melodramatic morality tale titled Marriage à la Mode, engraved in 1745, shows the parade rooms of a stylish London house, in which the only rococo is in plasterwork of the salon's ceiling. Palladian architecture is in control. Here, on the Kentian mantel, the crowd of Chinese vases and mandarins are satirically rendered as hideous little monstrosities, and the Rococo wall clock is a jumble of leafy branches.

 

In general, Rococo is an entirely interior style, because the wealthy and aristocratic moved back to Paris from Versailles. Paris was already built up and so rather than engaging in major architectural additions, they simply renovated the interiors of the existing buildings.

bottom of page