Since the 13th century, Swedish monarchs have called the Royal Palace in Stockholm home.
Baroque architect Nicodemus Tessin the Younger designed the current 600-room, Roman-style palace after a fire destroyed the previous structure in 1697. When Tessin died, architect Carl Harleman completed the structure.
Tessin’s Royal Palace design exemplifies the Tessin Gold Baroque style. The Tessin style includes the essentials of the baroque style with its rich ornamentation and symmetrical design elements (particularly s-shaped curves in art and furniture designs) but with French and Italian influences, not seen in Sweden’s baroque style before. Prior to Tessin, Northern European art and architecture had informed Sweden’s early-baroque style (Caroline Period).
Having studied in Italy and France, Tessin counted some of France’s great artists and architects—Charles Le Brun, Jean Bérain, and André Le Nôtre, to name a few—among his friends. And in Italy, he studied under Gian Lorenzo Bernini and his pupil Carlo Fontana. Their influence on Tessin’s work can be seen throughout the bricks, mortar, and decorative works of this bastion of Swedish architecture.
In Tessin’s time, King Louis XIV and the Palace of Versailles’s courtly ceremonial style ruled European royal etiquette. Tessin based the Royal Palace on the practical design of Versailles, keeping the royal apartments, the royal chapel, and the buildings of the country’s administration in close proximity. He also copied some of the French palace’s interiors, notably mimicking the Hall of Mirrors in his design for Karl XI’s Gallery.
In the guest apartments, visitors can see the 18th-century decorative style, adorned with Swedish furniture, mostly made in Stockholm during the 18th and 19th centuries.
Tessin’s Royal Palace demonstrates the architect’s skill of blending several European styles while staying true to the harmony and abundance that defines the baroque style.
Lorraine Ferrier
Author
Lorraine Ferrier writes about fine arts and craftsmanship for The Epoch Times. She focuses on artists and artisans, primarily in North America and Europe, who imbue their works with beauty and traditional values. She's especially interested in giving a voice to the rare and lesser-known arts and crafts, in the hope that we can preserve our traditional art heritage. She lives and writes in a London suburb, in England.