400 Years of French Presence in Louisiana
Transcription
400 Years of French Presence in Louisiana
400 Y e a r s of Fr e nc h Pr e se nc e in L ou isi a n a tre asures from the Bibliothèque nationale de Fr ance tHE HISTORIC NE W ORLEANS COLLECTION NEw Orle ans, Louisiana M arch 3 – June 2 2007 400 Y e a r s of Fr e nc h Pr e se nc e in L ou isi a n a treasures from the Bibliothèque nationale de Fr ance B efore it took form on a map, Louisiana lived in the French imagination, its boundaries traced by desire. At the dawn of the seventeenth century, North America beckoned explorers and sparked dreams of empire. Ships departed from French ports bearing soldiers and sailors, missionaries and chaplains, hydrographers and cartographers. The early explorers chronicled the largely unexplored and little understood world of Louisiana in journals, drawings, and maps. The circulation of these materials in France marked the beginning of a centuries-long dialogue across the Atlantic. French settlers struggled to possess and portray Louisiana, hoping to both find and establish their place in the New World. From highly accurate views of the colonies to the most whimsical fantasies, the French story of Louisiana was initially told in the language of the mother country. Eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Louisiana history is dominated by political struggle— but as France, Spain, Great Britain, and eventually the United States jockeyed for control of the territory, a unique culture was developing. By the time of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, the way of life established by the Lower Mississippi Valley’s French-speaking inhabitants was viable enough to withstand the Anglicization prevalent in the rest of the territory. Relocated to Louisiana, Acadians and émigrés from St. Domingue increased the French presence, but also reflected the unique fusion of cultures born of France but reared in the Americas. Louisiana’s fine and decorative arts, music, and architecture emerged from an acculturated society built on a strong French foundation—enriched by infusions of African, Native American, Spanish, Caribbean, German, and Anglo-American cultures—to become a distinctive part of America’s cultural mélange. opposite page: Detail, Poême en ver s by Jean François Benjamin Dumont de Montigny By the twentieth century, Louisiana had established its own identity as a vibrant locale, and the cultural exchange with France now flowed in two directions. No Louisiana export of the twentieth century was more enthusiastically received in France than jazz. No longer a child reflecting the glories of its mother country, Louisiana offered its own treasures to France. I n late August 2005, Louisiana was devastated by Hurricane Katrina. Among the first to respond were our French friends. French Consul General Pierre Lebovics escorted French Ambassador Jean-David Levitte through the streets of New Orleans less than a month after the storm—and within two months, French Minister of Culture and Media Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres arrived with senior staff to assess the situation. These were just the first of several official visits of representatives of the French government. By late September 2005, as part of the recovery effort, France pledged to send an assortment of extraordinary documents and artifacts relating to Louisiana—many never before displayed to the public—for an exhibition at The Historic New Orleans Collection. We would like to thank the Minister of Culture and Media, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Ambassador, the Consul General, the President and the Director of the Bibliothèque nationale de France, and their staffs for their exceptional generosity, as well as the Board of Directors of the Kemper and Leila Williams Foundation for making this exhibition a reality. – Alfred E. Lemmon and Gilles-Antoine Langlois, Curators Carte de l’A mérique sep tentrionale…, ca. 1681; manuscript map with watercolor, attributed to Claude Bernou, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Cartes et plans, SH Pf 122, div. 2, p0, Rés This mural map documents the principal colonial territories acquired by the French between 1676 and 1680 in the Great Lakes region. It marks out not only the lands identified by the voyages of Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet in 1673, but also the French forts Conti (Niagara), Miami (Michigan), and Crèvecoeur (Illinois) constructed by René Robert Cavelier, sieur de La Salle during his first explorations of the region. — 2 Découverte du cour s du Mississipi et de l a Louisiane, 1699; engraving, by an unknown maker, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Estampes et photographie, Vd 21, t. 3 This is the only known illustration of the Louisiana colonization voyage by naval officer and explorer Pierre Le Moyne, sieur d’Iberville. On the Gulf Coast, Iberville established Biloxi and then Mobile, the first French settlements in the Louisiana colony (or la Louisiane), so named by La Salle in honor of Louis XIV. The inscription notes that natives in the region loved the sun, an affection that might naturally ally them with the Sun King. Pl an de l a Nouvelle Orle ans, ca. 1718; manuscript plan with watercolor, by Paul de Perrier, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Cartes et Plans, Ge DD 2987 (8826) This magnificent, unrealized plan for a fortified New Orleans has been attributed to Parisian noble Paul de Perrier, the first chief engineer assigned by the Company of the Indies to serve in Louisiana. After receiving his appointment in April 1718, but before departing France, Perrier or one of his assistants may have commenced the detailed plan of an oval fortified city—conforming to orders from the Company of the Indies to establish it at a site farther away from the Gulf of Mexico, near Manchac. The city depicted in the plan is roughly eight times larger than the plan eventually adopted for New Orleans. — 3 Ballet du temple de l a paix, by Jean-Baptiste Lully, Paris: Christophe Ballard, 1685, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Musique, Vm2 89A This ballet by Jean-Baptiste Lully (1632–1687), an Italian-born composer who became Louis XIV’s favored musician, was performed for the first time in October 1685. The ballet is based on a libretto by Philippe Quinault and praises France’s growing influence by illustrating the submission of various peoples to the Sun King. Basques, Bretons, Americans, and Africans are presented in succession; a chorus of American “sauvages” strikes a particularly original note, with dancers dressed in costumes designed by Jean Bérain, dessinateur de la chambre et du cabinet de Roi. Le Triomphe de l’A mour , from Recueil génér al des oper a ..., by Jean-Baptiste Lully, Paris: Christophe Ballard, 1714; vol. 3, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Bibliothèque-Musée de l’Opera, Liv 18 (R 12 [1–8]) Based on a libretto by Isaac Benserade and Philippe Quinault, Lully’s ballet Le Triomphe de l’Amour premiered in January 1681 and included “two Indian women” and an “Indian man” in the cast. Histoire du Che valier de s Grieux e t de M anon Le scaut, vol. 7 of M émoire s et Avantures d ’un homme de qualité, by Antoine François Prévost d’Exiles, Paris, 1731, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Réserve des livres rares, Rés. p Y2 2451 (7) Although Antoine François Prévost d’Exiles (1697–1763) never set foot in America, he situated portions of his novel Histoire du Chevalier des Grieux et de Manon Lescaut in Louisiana. Published in 1731, the adventures of a crook and a courtesan provoked scandal, enjoyed consequent success, and have since inspired films, operas, and a ballet. Manon’s lover, Des Grieux, describes the young town of New Orleans as “nothing but a collection of a few mean cabins” surrounded by a wild and uninhabited countryside, but later praises the city—“Anyone who wants to taste love in all its sweetness…should come to New Orleans.” — 4 Poême en ver s, ca. 1744; manuscript, by Jean François Benjamin Dumont de Montigny, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Bibliothèque de l’arsenal, Ms 3459 This long poem chronicles the author’s adventures in Louisiana and provides particularly insightful commentary on the Natchez Wars. Dumont, the son of a magistrate, was born in Paris in 1696. Having served in Canada, he came to Louisiana in 1719 and traveled widely throughout the colony, returning to France in 1737. The manuscript is interesting not only for its nearly 5000 verses but also for its maps, plans, and surveys, drawn and colored by the author in a primitive style. — 5 Tr aité d ’a mitié et de commerce entre l a Fr ance et les Etats -Unis, February 6, 1778; Paris, courtesy of Archives du ministère des Affaires étrangères, Paris, Traités, Etats-Unis, 17780012 France closely followed the events leading up to the American Revolution. Popular opinion favored the rebels, but official support was far from certain when Benjamin Franklin—the first U.S. diplomat—arrived in Paris in December 1776. Franklin would spend ten months in France before Versailles showed any serious interest in engaging in the American war. Negotiations picked up following the successful campaign of 1777 and culminated in the Treaty of Amity and Commerce. Signed in Paris on February 6, 1778, it was the first U.S. treaty with a foreign power. Registre d ’imm atricul ation du consul at de Fr ance à l a Nouvelle- Orlé ans, 1914– 1935; register, by the French Consulate, New Orleans, courtesy of Archives diplomatiquesNantes, La Nouvelle-Orléans, consulat, série C, 3* The Registers of the French Consulate constitute a precious source of information concerning French immigration to Louisiana in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Thanks to these registers—often supplemented with photographs—the faces, names, family situations, ages, origins, and professions of French immigrants in New Orleans are recorded for posterity. Data was frequently recorded several years after an individual moved to the area. For example, Jean Labernadie, a native of Vidouze (Hautes-Pyrénées), did not register until 1917, even though he was married in 1895 in New Orleans and his son, Arnold, was born two years later. — 6 L a R e v u e N è g r e av e c S i d n e y B e ch e t ( s a xo ph o n e s o p r a n o) au Th é ât r e d e s C h a m p s E lys é e s , ca. 1925; photograph, by an unknown photographer, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Audiovisuel, Fonds Charles Delaunay, boîte 28, page 27 Paris’s infatuation with African culture had been evident since the late 19th-century minstrels of Montmartre’s bohemian nightclubs and the rise of l’art nègre in the early 1900s. But the fascination reached new heights in October 1925, when La Revue Nègre was staged at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées. The performance featured some 30 African-American dancers and musicians, including Josephine Baker (who made her memorable Paris debut) and New Orleans native Sidney Bechet. The show’s scenery designer, Michel Covarrubias, created two riverboats, the Memphis and the Natchez. In front are the Charleston Steppers, and behind them is dancer Louis Douglas. Standing in the background are the musicians: (from left) Daniel Doy, Henry Goodwin, Ernest “Bass” Hill, Percy Johnson, Bechet, and Joe Hayman. Musiciens de l a Nouvelle- Orlé ans, 1947; photograph, by Henri Cartier-Bresson, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Estampes et photographie, Ep 130 (7) fol. (HCB 219) For much of the 20th century, Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908–2004) defined—if not invented—the use of the 35mm camera for purposes of artistic expression. In a photographic career that covered seven decades, the Frenchman traveled the world in search of “the decisive moment.” His photographs were widely published in the popular picture magazines of the mid-20th century, although the term “photojournalism” tends to define his work too narrowly. In 1947, the year that this photograph was made in New Orleans, Cartier-Bresson and several other photographers founded the Magnum picture agency, which still operates today. — 7 C l u b d u V i e u x C o l o m b i e r . S i d n e y B e ch e t, C l au d e Lu t e r e t s o n o r ch e s t r e , 1952; poster, by Pierre Merlin, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Arts du spectacle, AFF 31828 Sidney Bechet developed as a jazz artist in his home of New Orleans but found greater celebrity in France. He first toured Europe in 1919 as a teenager playing the clarinet with Will Marion Cook’s Southern Syncopated Orchestra. After two years with Cook, Bechet broke away from the group to work in England and France with a ragtime band led by Benny Payton. He toured the U.S. and Europe throughout the 1920s, and it was during this period that he transitioned to the soprano sax, the instrument with which he is most associated. Bechet struggled during the 1930s, but renewed interest in New Orleans music late in the decade improved his status. Fans eagerly greeted his return to Europe in 1949, after a near 20-year absence. In 1951 he moved permanently to Paris, where he was revered as a show-business celebrity. Un tr a mway n o m m é D é s i r a m è n e Te nn e s s e e Wi llia m s à Par i s , 1949; press clippings, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Arts du spectacle, Rsupp 2767 Playwright Tennessee Williams enjoyed success but also courted controversy both in the United States and abroad. His quintessential New Orleans play, A Streetcar Named Desire (1947), has come to emblematize the city with its interplay of the genteel and the brutal. The 1949 premiere of Streetcar in Paris sent shock waves through the theatrical community. Le Figaro reported “stripteases, bizarre morbidities, riots, drunken orgies, poker parties, shriekings, eroticism…obscenities and rapes, with just a bit of sexual deviation tossed in for good measure.” All in all, it added up to “the greatest sensation the American theater has ever given France,” according to the Parisian theater manager. Small wonder, given that no American play had ever been accorded a costlier production. L a Poupée de chair , 1956; poster, By an unknown artist, The Fred W. Todd Tennessee Williams Collection, The Historic New Orleans Collection (2001-10-L.1) The film Baby Doll, directed by Streetcar’s American stage and film director, Elia Kazan, opened to audiences worldwide in 1956. It was derived from the Tennessee Williams play Tiger Tail, itself an adaptation of his short story turned one-act play 27 Wagons Full of Cotton. Starring Karl Malden, Carroll Baker, and Eli Wallach, the film stirred controversy worldwide and was condemned by the Legion of Decency for its strong sexual content. This poster advertises the French-language version, La poupée de chair. — 8 The Historic New Orleans Collection gratefully acknowledges the following institutions and individuals, whose generosity made Four Hundred Years of French Presence in Louisiana possible. Ministère de la Culture et de la communication Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres, Ministre de la Culture et de la communication Marie-Frédérique Bergeaud, Adjointe au chef du département des affaires européennes et internationales Ministère des Affaires étrangères Philippe Douste-Blazy, Ministre des Affaires étrangères Jean-David Levitte, Ambassadeur de France aux Etats-Unis Pierre Lebovics, Consul gènèral de France à la Nouvelle-Orléans Debbie de la Houssaye, Attachée artistique, Consulat de France à la Nouvelle-Orléans Jean Mendelson, Directeur des Archives du ministère des Affaires étrangères Isabelle Richefort, Chef du département des Archives historiques Pierre Vidal, Directeur de la Bibliothèque-musée de l’Opéra Antoine Coron, Directeur de la Réserve des livres rares Alfred E. Lemmon, Director, Williams Research Center, The Historic New Orleans Collection Monique Choudey, Directeur du département Philosophie, histoire et sciences de l’homme Gilles-Antoine Langlois, Lecturer in History and Urban Studies, Université de Paris XII Jean-François Foucaud, Directeur du département Littérature et art Isabelle Giannattasio, Directeur du département de l’Audiovisuel Thierry Sarmant, Directeur adjoint, département des Monnaies, médailles et antiques Michel Dhénin, Conservateur général des bibliothèques, département des Monnaies, médailles et antiques Cécile Coutin, Conservateur en chef des bibliothèques, département des Arts du spectacle Catherine Hofmann, Conservateur des bibliothèques, département des Cartes et plans Anne Storelli, Bibliothécaire, département des Arts du spectacle Jérôme Cras, Conservateur en chef du Patrimoine, Centre des Archives diplomatiques Brigitte Robin-Loiseau, Service des Expositions extérieures Cyril Chazal, Chargé de la communication, département de la Reproduction Jean-Noël Jeanneney, Président Société de Géographie Agnès Saal, Directrice générale Jean Bastié, Président Jacqueline Sanson, Directrice des collections Magnum Photos Thierry Grillet, Délégué à la diffusion culturelle Catherine Rouvière, Chargée des expositions collectives Lucien Scotti, Directeur des affaires européennes et internationales New Orleans Museum of Art E. John Bullard, The Montine McDaniel Freeman Director Freeport-McMoran Foundation Cynthia M. Molyneux, President Bruno Blasselle, Directeur de la Bibliothèque de l’Arsenal Louisiana Supreme Court Thierry Delcourt, Directeur du département des Manuscrits Pascal F. Calogero Jr., Chief Justice Catherine Massip, Directeur du département de la Musique Hélène Richard, Directeur du département des Cartes et plans John E. Walker, President Charles Snyder Fred M. Smith John Kallenborn Priscilla Lawrence, Executive Director John H. Lawrence, Director of Museum Programs Exhibition Graphics and Design Nathalie Léman, Responsable du service des Expositions extérieures Noëlle Guibert, Directeur du département des Arts du spectacle Mrs. William K. Christovich, Chairman Ines Villela-Petit, Conservateur du Patrimoine, département des Monnaies, médailles et antiques Annie-France Renaudin, Chef du Centre des Archives diplomatiques Sylvie Aubenas, Directeur par intérim du département des Estampes et de la photographie Board of Directors Warren J. Woods, Collections Manager Anne Legrand, Chargée du fonds Charles Delaunay, département de l’Audiovisuel Michel Amandry, Directeur du département des Monnaies, médailles et antiques The Historic New Orleans Collection Olivier Loiseaux, Conservateur des bibliothèques, département des Cartes et plans Isabelle Nathan, Chef de la conservation des Traités Bibliothèque Nationale de France Exhibition Curators Law Library of Louisiana Carol D. Billings, Director Jason Kruppa, Library Manager Steve Sweet Terry Weldon Scott Ratterree Mitchell Long Exhibition Staff Pamela Arceneaux Viola Berman Siva Blake Jan White Brantley Mark Cave Teresa Devlin Jessica Dorman Mary Lou Eichhorn Elizabeth Elmwood Larry Falgoust Maclyn Hickey Teresa Kirkland Goldie Lanaux John Magill Howard Margot Anne McCall Mary Mees Keely Merritt Toy O’Ferrall Dr. Harry Redman Elsa Schneider Rebecca Smith Jude Solomon Sally Stassi Jason Wiese Brochure Design Alison Cody Front and Back Covers: Jeton de l a Compagnie des Indes, ca. 1717; gold, by an unknown maker, courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France, Monnaies, médailles et antiques, sans cote A small number of gold tokens were produced upon the launch of John Law’s Company of the Indies, to be given to the Company’s directors and primary investors. The front of the token (pictured on the front cover) depicts a scene of abundance on the banks of the Mississippi: a figure, holding a cornucopia, is borne aloft by two Indians. On the back, the motto Honor non Pretium (“glory, not wealth”) serves as a reminder of the moral underpinnings of the colonization effort. This particular token was meant for the king himself, to be featured prominently in his collection. Exposition réalisée avec le concours exceptionnel de la Bibliothèque nationale de France Additional support provided by Freeport-McMoRan Foundation The Historic New Orleans Collection 533 Royal Street New Orleans Louisiana 70130 (504) 523-4662 Visit the collection online at www.hnoc.org