Fontainebleau
Également connu sous : Fontainebleau
Place places/cities Basic Mis à jour: 2026-03-06
Voir dans le journal 1 mentions Research Status: Moderate Last Updated: 2026-02-10 Diary Coverage: References during Paris years
Overview
Fontainebleau is a town 55 km southeast of Paris, famous for its royal palace and surrounding forest. For Marie Bashkirtseff, Fontainebleau represented both a historical landmark and a popular excursion destination from Paris. The Chateau de Fontainebleau, with its centuries of royal art collections, and the surrounding forest, beloved by the Barbizon school of painters, made it a site of particular interest for an aspiring artist.
Historical Context
The Palace
The Chateau de Fontainebleau was one of France's grandest royal residences:- Originally a medieval hunting lodge, transformed by Francois I in the 16th century
- Home to a remarkable collection of Renaissance art, including works commissioned from Italian masters
- Napoleon I had used it as an imperial residence; it was here he signed his abdication in 1814
- Under the Third Republic, the palace was maintained as a national monument and museum
The Forest
The Forest of Fontainebleau (20,000 hectares) was artistically significant:- The Barbizon School (Corot, Millet, Rousseau) had painted here from the 1830s-1860s
- Plein-air painting in the forest influenced the Impressionists
- The forest was a popular destination for Parisian day-trippers
- Rock formations, gorges, and ancient trees provided dramatic subjects
Significance for Marie
- Art historical importance: The palace collections and the Barbizon painters' legacy
- Parisian excursion: An accessible day trip from the capital
- Historical resonance: Centuries of French royal history
- Landscape painting: The forest as a subject for artists
Related Entries
- #Paris - The city from which excursions departed
- #Bois_de_Boulogne - Another Parisian green space