The Signing of Peace in the Hall of Mirrors, Versailles, 28 June 1919 is an
oil-on-canvas painting by Irish artist
William Orpen, completed in 1919. It was one of the paintings commissioned from Orpen to commemorate the
Peace Conference at
Versailles in 1919. The work is held by the
Imperial War Museum in London.
Background
Orpen was one of the first people chosen as a
war artist by the British
Ministry of Information in 1917. Orpen was also the official painter at the peace conference and was commissioned to paint three canvases to record the proceedings. The work was the most expensive of the British public art commissions associated with the First World War: Orpen was paid £3,000; by comparison,
John Singer Sargent received £300 for his much larger painting Gassed.
The painting depicts the signature of the
Treaty of Versailles by representatives from Germany on 28 June 1919 that formally ended the
First World War. The group portrait depicts soldiers, diplomats and politicians who attended the conference while the treaty was signed in the opulent surroundings of
Louis XIV's
Hall of Mirrors at the
Palace of Versailles. High up can be seen the words "Le Roy Gouverne par lui meme" (French: "The King governs alone"). It measures 152.4 × 127 centimetres (60.0 × 50.0 in).
Orpen grew to dislike the politicians at the conference and considered them vain and greedy. In his painting, they are dwarfed by the scale of the palace.
Subjects
The people depicted are:
In the front row:
Johannes Bell, German
Centre Party politician, Reichskolonialminister (Minister of Colonial Affairs) and Reichsverkehrsminister (Minister of Transport), sitting in a chair, signing the treaty
Hermann Müller, German
SPD politician and Reichsaußenminister (Foreign Minister), stands beside him, leaning over
Orpen is depicted twice, as an indistinct figure visible in the distorting mirrors behind the main subjects.
Other paintings
Orpen's other paintings of the conference depict preliminary discussions of the "Council of Ten" in the Hall of Clocks at the French
Ministry of Foreign Affairs at the
Quai d'Orsay, and another showing a coffin
lying in state in a marble hall covered by a
Union Flag.