Why the court trusted ornament more than silence
At Versailles, the empty surface was never neutral; it was a challenge that painters, gilders, and upholsterers answered in rose, celadon, and gold.
Last winter I spent two weeks moving through the conservation rooms with a notebook and a foolishly precise eye, and the lesson was humiliating: ornament is not excess, it is an argument. The shell, the ribbon, and the C-scroll do not arrive to decorate a room after the fact; they arrive to tell you that the room has already chosen a side.
Asymmetry is where the persuasion begins
Rococo refuses the neat moral of the mirrored hall. It prefers a slope, a curve, a flourish that lands a fraction late, as if the wall had just remembered how to breathe. That delay is the whole point. It gives the eye time to linger, and lingering is how a court turns craft into authority.