Pretty as a Picture

Pretty as a Picture

A visit to Nymphenburg Palace

Large palace with numerous annexes stretching on either side of main building with large pond in front, Nymphenburg Castle, Munich

I‘d figured out from day one that everything in Munich is on a large scale, but nothing prepared me for the scale of Nymphenburg Palace. The Oldies are slow at the best of times, but even they needed two full days to get around the palace and grounds, and they still didn’t get to see it all.

Seamus the Seagull in foreground looking down canal in front of large palace in background, swans swimming in water, people walking along tree-lined avenues on either side of canal, Nymphenburg Castle, Munich

The Wingless Wonders spent the first day alone simply walking around the palace park. This has to be seen to be believed. There are numerous pavilions in the grounds, including a hunting lodge and a bathing house with an ornate, indoor swimming pool. Luxury all the way!

Seamus the Seagull standing on wall in front of two storey building with pond in front of it, green shutters on windows, trees on either side, Nymphenburg Castle, Munich

Her Ladyship, however, was more interested in the baroque pump house than all those elaborate villas and lodges. The original wooden pump mechanism which operates the palace fountains was replaced with metal workings over two hundred years ago and has been in operation ever since. This apparently makes it the oldest continually working machine in Europe. That’s a pretty nifty piece of engineering!  Given a choice, though, I’d still go for that indoor swimming pool…

Goose standing on one foot at river's edge, balding man with grey beard wearing back jacket and grey trousers and holding camera standing nearby on one leg, people and trees in background

When travelling, they say you should do what the locals do, but His Lordship took this bit of advice a little too literally!

Elaborately decorated carriage with coats of arms in the veneer on doors, carriage standing in vaulted room with arched windows, Nymphenburg Castle, Munich

There were some more interesting pieces of equipment in the Marstall Coach Museum which is in just one of the many annexes of the palace. This collection must be the ancient equivalent of those super duper cars we had seen at BMW Museum and BMW World. Mad vehicles with all the bells and whistles – in this case, literally. But to me, they looked like giant prams – for spoilt, overgrown kids perhaps. The royals not only had fleets of coaches, but fleets of sledges into the bargain.

View don long, hallway with arches and pillars and arched windows of small child's pony trap in foreground, models of eight decorated white horses pulling carriage in background, Nymphenburg Castle, Munich

The pièce de résistance was this coronation coach – an eight horsepower vehicle! Powerful for the time, I suppose.

Set of dinnerware in glass case, each plate and platter with different pictures of fish with vegetation in green and brown, Nymphenburg Castle, Munich

In the same building, there is a museum dedicated to Nymphenburg Porcelain. I found parts of the collection quite stunning, especially the beautifully crafted bird ornaments and the delicate flowers and insects atop vases and tureens. Some items were rather over the top, though. But I had no problem in choosing my favourite pieces: this wonderful fishy dinnerware. Even empty, these plates whet my appetite!

View from below of large, elaborate painted ceiling with various scenes of people, angels, etc, gold and white cornices on lower edges, Nymphenburg Castle, Munich

The Dynamic Duo eventually got around to visiting the palace itself. I’ve seen many a dark and gloomy castle in my time, but I have to say that this interior was a cheery sight. The characters on the ceiling paintings in the Great Hall are an upbeat lot, and I don’t think I’d ever seen a rainbow in decor of this vintage before. I found it all very Disney-esque. All it needed was the crock of gold at the end of the rainbow to complete the picture….

Hah, I wasn’t far off in my interpretation of the Disney-esque nature of the decor. It turns out that King Ludwig II was born here. He’s the guy who went on to build those famous fairy tale castles, the best known being Neuschwanstein Castle. You know, the one that was the inspiration for the Disney Cinderella Castle. I suspect some of his coaches would suit a Cinderella too.

I’ve often thought that portrait artists of old must surely have been tempted to enhance the features of the often rather, let’s say, facially challenged aristocrats they were commissioned to paint. The ancient equivalent of photoshopping, if you like.

Thankfully, the Gallery of the Beauties, commissioned by King Ludwig I, is one of those rare portrait galleries full of genuinely good-looking women. And another other rare feature: the 36 women were from all sections of society, chosen purely for their beauty. Probably not very ‘woke’ in today’s terms, but it is refreshing, all the same, to find portraits that are easy on the eye.

Smiling, balding man with grey beard holding a camera in front of him pictured in large ornate mirror, two gilt framed portraits of women in elaborate antique costumes on the wall behind him, Nymphenburg Castle, Munich

Pity about the ‘Beast’ amongst them!

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