Excerpt:
...In what is perhaps the earliest surviving example
of symbolism, the cave painters of the Upper Palaeolithic
period drew geometrical patterns, thought to represent
man and woman, at the Lascaux and the Chauvet caves
in present-day France. Some 25,000 years later, at a
ruined country house at the edge of the Mayenne woods
near Laval, a French artist named Robert Tatin constructed
a courtyard of totems and temples, decorated with the
ancient Chinese symbols of Yin and Yang, and covered
with interlacing geometric representations of woman
and man, the moon and the sun. Robert Tatin bought the
house, the Frénouse, near the small town of Cossé-le-Vivien
in 1962. Rich in history, part of its stonework dates
from the sixth century, while stone axes from the Neolithic
period had been discovered in the fields nearby. Over
a period of twenty-one years, with the assistance of
his fifth wife, Lise, Robert Tatin created a magical
cement fortress, where goddesses, dragons, snakes and
fairies dance among bas-reliefs of ancient Chinese and
Breton symbols, celebrating man’s union with nature
and the cyclical passage of time.
The approach to
the house and museum is flanked by wide-eyed, totemic
figures. Guarding the 80-metre-long Avenue of Giants
are nineteen statues representing Tatin’s historic and
artistic family, from Joan of Arc to Alfred Jarry. Next
to the Avenue of Giants is The Gateway of the Giants,
a homage to some of the father-figures of western art:
Leonardo da Vinci, Rembrandt, Delacroix, Goya, and Van
Gogh. The story told by this company of giants also
traces the development of the artist’s own life, from
his first history lessons, to his professional career,
personified by a top-hatted carpenter, to the artists
who influenced him, pointing finally to his own grave.
Once inside the museum, however, the linear structure
is abandoned. Over a surface of 1,200 square metres,
the artist has created a miniature universe, incorporating
the sun, moon, and sea. Consisting of three main temple-like
structures, reflected in a cross-shaped pond, the courtyard
and adjoining house are articulated on an east-west
axis. Facing the entrance is the towering Notre-Dame-Tout-le-Monde,
to the east is The Gateway of the Sun, and to the west
The Gateway of the Moon. The journey through the museum
follows the direction of the earth’s rotation, guided
by statues around the central pool indicating the successive
months of the year. Tatin’s paintings, sculptures, ceramics
and tapestries are displayed in adjoining rooms.