With the death of Louis XIV on 1 September 1715, his grandson, Louis XV, born in 1710, became King. Because of his young age, France was ruled by a Regent,
Philippe of Orleans, until 1723. During this period, the style of furniture changed little from the Louis XIV period; it was massive, lavishly decorated and solemn, designed for the gigantic state halls of the new
Palace of Versailles. In 1722 Louis XV moved from Paris, where he had lived with the Regent, to Versailles, began his own rule, and gradually imposed his own taste on the arts, architecture, and furniture. Louis left the exterior of Versailles and the other palaces largely unchanged, but beginning in 1738 he extensively redesigned the interiors, creating the
petits apartments, or smaller apartments and salons for himself, the Queen,
Marie Leszczyńska, whom he married in 1725, and later, for his primary mistresses,
Madame de Pompadour and
Madame du Barry. In these salons the traditional etiquette and formality of Louis XIV was abandoned. These new suites of smaller rooms were furnished in a new style that met the needs of comfort, intimacy and elegance. Beginning in about 1730, His preference was for the style called
rocaille, a term which referred to an ornamental decoration resembling a stylized seashell, a style which expressed gaiety and fantasy. The ornament appeared rarely on the exteriors of the new buildings, but lavishly in the interiors, on the walls, ceilings, and furniture. The architects
Robert de Cotte and
Ange-Jacques Gabriel remade the interiors of the
Palace of Versailles, the
Palace of Fontainebleau, and the
Château de Compiègne in the new style. Palatial residences with rocaille interiors soon appeared In Paris. They included the
Hôtel Soubise in Paris, (now the National Archives) in 1705; the
Hôtel Matignon (now the residence of the French Prime Minister) in 1721, by Jean Courtonne; and the
Hôtel Biron (now the
Musée Rodin) by
Jean Aubert. They also appeared in the French provinces, the royal residence by
Emmanuel Héré in
Nancy, and also in
Aix-en-Provence and
Bordeaux. All of these buildings featured rooms arranged in the new style; the bedrooms took on new importance, and were surrounded by smaller anterooms and cabinets, including an entirely new kind of room, the dining-room. All of them needed new furniture to match the new style and arrangement. For a quarter of a century, the furniture designs of the
rocaille style was dominant, particularly under the influence of
Juste-Aurèle Meissonier (1695-1750), the Italian-born architect who became royal architect and designer of Louis XV, and the ornament designer
Nicolas Pineau (1684-1754). Under their influence, straight lines disappeared, replaced by curves, ornaments lost all symmetry, and garlands of flowers appeared everywhere. Designs inspired by Chinese art and other exotic sources appeared in profusion, though the
rocaille style never reached the excess of exuberance of the
Rococo style that appeared in Italy, Austria and Germany. In the 1740s, the style began to slowly change; decoration became less extravagant and more discreet. In 1754 the brother of Madame de Pompadour, the Marquis de Marigny, accompanied the designer
Nicolas Cochin and a delegation of artists and scholars to Italy to see the recent discoveries at
Pompeii and
Herculaneum, and made a grand tour of other classical monuments. They returned full of enthusiasm for a new classical style, based on the Roman and Greek monuments. In 1754 they published a manifesto against the Rocaille style, calling for a return to classicism. Marigny, after the death of Louis XV, later became director of buildings for Louis XVI. Between 1755 and 1760, the forms of furniture and interior decoration began to change into what became known as the Second Style Louis XV, or the
Style Transition. The
rocaille decoration remained, but became more discreet and restrained. Secondly, the new wave of enthusiasm for ancient Greece and Rome brought a series of new decorative themes, though the lines of the furniture were not much changed. This marked the beginning of what became French neoclassicism or
Louis XVI style. ==Designers==