A comprehensive tour of the magnificent Château de Chantilly, its
superlative art collection, important stables, and beautiful gardens.
The Domaine de Chantilly is an exceptional treasure of French culture
and heritage, rebuilt after the Revolution by Henri d'Orléans, duc
d'Aumale--son of King Louis-Philippe--as a home and museum for his
unrivaled collection of furniture, decorative arts, books, and
paintings. These constitute the Condé Museum's extensive
galleries--second only to the Louvre in France--with masterpieces
including paintings by Raphael, Clouet, Poussin, and Ingres; the
illuminated manuscript Les Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry;
furniture; porcelains; drawings; and early photographs.
Chantilly's elegant private apartments, kept precisely as they were
during the duc d'Aumale's lifetime, are beautifully preserved examples
of the uniquely French Louis Philippe style; its recently restored
garden was designed by celebrated landscape architect André Le Nôtre;
and the still-active Great Stables are the largest and most opulent in
Europe.
This slipcased volume offers rare access to one of France's most
complete and beautiful stately homes and its world-class art collection
that is carefully conserved today by the Institut de France.