The painter René-Antoine Houasse, then the engraver Charles Simonneau using the former's painting as a model, have represented the monument to Louis XIV at the place Vendôme, before its completion, in a very strange way: on rollers, as though being pulled on its way to the square, but still in the place where the statue was cast. This essay tries to understand how such a representation was possible or, in other words, what sort of interest was behind such an official project. The valorization of technical achievement is considered first through the representation of a cast without any precedent, but also through the insistence on the play of static forces (the rollers). It is suggested that the king is always more than his representations -mere material artefacts; simultaneously, technological virtuosity appears to be part of his grandeur.
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