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French Baroque architecture

French Baroque architecture, usually called French classicism, was a style of architecture during the reigns of Louis XIII (1610–1643), Louis XIV (1643–1715) and Louis XV (1715–1774). It was preceded by French Renaissance architecture and Mannerism and was followed in the second half of the 18th century by French Neoclassical architecture. The style was originally inspired by the Italian Baroque architecture style, but, particularly under Louis XIV, it gave greater emphasis to regularity, the colossal order of facades, and the use of colonnades and cupolas, to symbolize the power and grandeur of the King. Notable examples of the style include the Grand Trianon of the Palace of Versailles, and the dome of Les Invalides in Paris. In the final years of Louis XIV and the reign of Louis XV, the colossal orders gradually disappeared, the style became lighter and saw the introduction of wrought iron decoration in rocaille designs. The period also saw the introduction of monumental urban squares in Paris and other cities, notably Place Vendôme and the Place de la Concorde. The style profoundly influenced 18th-century secular architecture throughout Europe; the Palace of Versailles and the French formal garden were copied by other courts all over Europe.[1]

Palace of Versailles

Early French Classicism edit

The French Classicism was, from the beginning, an expression of the power and majesty of the Kings of France. It proceeded deliberately in a different direction from Italy and the rest of Europe, combining classical elements, especially colossal orders of columns, and avoiding the exuberant decoration that appeared on facades and interiors in Spain, Germany and Central Europe. It was used less frequently on churches and more often in the design of royal palaces and country residences. Another distinctive element of the French Classicism was the integration of the architecture of the house with the formal gardens around it, in what became known as the French formal garden.[2]

Salomon de Brosse (1571–1626) was one of the first French architects to adopt the style, in the construction of the Palais du Luxembourg he built for the mother of Louis XIII, Marie de Medici between 1615 and 1624. The Luxembourg Palace established a new pattern for royal residences, with pavilions on the corners, lateral wings, and a grand central entrance surmounted by a cupola. The walls feature colossal orders of columns with triangular pediments, indicating the classical inspiration behind the French movement. A traditional French feature was the high sloping mansard roof and the complex roofline. Like the palaces of the Medicis in Rome, the palace was surrounded by a large garden and fountains. The interior design was also innovative; the pavilions around the main block contained the apartments, allowing a greater flexibility and functionality of the interior space.[3]

One of the most accomplished formulators of the new style was François Mansart, a tireless perfectionist. He was not the first to use the sloping mansard roof, but he used it so effectively that it took his name. In his design for the Château de Maisons in Maisons-Laffitte, (1630–51), Mansart showed the continuity between the French Renaissance style and the new style. The structure is strictly symmetrical, with an order applied to each story, mostly in pilaster form. The frontispiece, crowned with a separate aggrandized roof, is infused with remarkable plasticity and the whole ensemble reads like a three-dimensional whole. Mansart's structures are stripped of overblown decorative effects, so typical of contemporary Rome. Italian Baroque influence is muted and relegated to the field of decorative ornamentation.

Louis Le Vau was another central figure in the early French Classicism style. He designed the Château of Vaux-le-Vicomte (1656–1661) for Nicolas Fouquet, the Superintendent of Finances of the young Louis XIV. The design of the chateau itself was similar to that of the Luxembourg Palace and the Palazzo Barberini in Rome. What made it distinctive from earlier styles was the unity of its architecture, interior, and landscape around it. Its facade featured stylized monumental columns, wings combined with mansard roofs and a prominent dome, in the Baroque style. The interior was lavishly decorated with murals by Charles Le Brun and it was placed in the center of enormous formal gardens designed by André Le Notre, laid out in geometric patterns paths, flower beds, fountains and reflecting pools, which seemed to extend the architecture of the house in every direction. [4]The grand salon of the building opened out onto the garden, a feature which thereafter became a regular feature of Baroque palaces. After seeing the lavishness of the building, the King dismissed and imprisoned Fouquet, took possession of the house for the crown, and soon put Le Vau to work to create his own palace in Versailles.[3]

The same three artists scaled this concept to monumental proportions in the royal hunting lodge and later main Palace of Versailles (1661–1690). On a far grander scale, the palace is a hypertrophied and somewhat repetitive version of Vaux-le-Vicomte. It was both the most grandiose and the most imitated residential building of the 17th century. Mannheim, Nordkirchen and Drottningholm were among many foreign residences for which Versailles provided a model.

The Louvre facade edit

In 1665, the chief minister of Louis XIV, Jean Colbert, invited the most famous architect and sculptor of the Italian Baroque, Gian Lorenzo Bernini to Paris, to propose a design for the new east wing of the Louvre, located on the eastern side of the Cour Carrée (Square Courtyard). This design would have aligned the architecture of Paris to the Italian Baroque style. However, in the end Louis turned instead to French designers. He wanted a design that would be distinctly French, rather than a copy of the Italian style. In April 1667, he gave the commission to a committee, the Petit Conseil, consisting of Louis Le Vau, Charles Le Brun, and Claude Perrault, and the three men designed the new façade together.[5] It featured the giant order, that is, a long row of double columns two stories high, resting on top of a massive lower level[6] with tall, segmental-arched windows, modeled on those used for the Renaissance-style Lescot Wing.[7] It had a flat roof concealed by a balustrade, with a triangular pediment in the center over the main entry. In 1668 a decision was made to double the width of the south wing, resulting in the construction a new facade on the south, facing the Seine. Perrault also designed a new facade on the interior of the court facing west, and a matching new facade on the north.[8]

The Palace of Versailles edit

The most important showcase of the French Classicism was the Palace of Versailles. It was begun in 1624 by Louis XIII as a hunting lodge. In 1634, Louis XIII had it enlarged into a chateau by his chief architect and engineer, Philibert Le Roy. In 1661, Louis XIV decided to enlarge it further, without destroying the original. He commissioned Louis Le Vau and Charles le Brun as his architect and designer, and assigned André Le Nôtre to create a grand formal garden that could be viewed from the Chateau, on the model of Vaux-le-Vicomte. When Le Vau died in 1670, the project was given to his assistant François d'Orbay, who completed the initial phase in 1674.[9][10]

The new palace surrounded the old brick chateau, with new wings the north, south and to the rear. The facade, like the new Louvre wing, featured colossal order columns, while the roof was flat with a terrance, decorated with balustrades, pilasters, balconies, statues, and trophies. Beginning in 1674–75, Le Brun created the interior. A small army of painters, sculptors, and decorators went to work, using marble, polychrome stone, bronze. mirrors and gilded stucco. Le Brun himself painted the ceiling. The Hall of Mirrors, constructed in 1678–1680 by Jules Hardouin-Mansart, the nephew of Francois Mansart, overlooked the new garden. It was also decorated by Le Brun, who completed it in 1684,[11] after which it became the symbol of the entire French Baroque style. The new Palace was open to almost any visitor, and became an immense theatre, where the King carried out his ceremonies, with meticulous protocol, in public view.[12]

Louis continued to add to the Palace through the end of his reign. In 1687, Jules Hardouin-Mansart and then Robert de Cotte erected the Grand Trianon, on the model of an Italian building, the Marble Trianon. It had a single floor, decorated with plaster and marble, with a flat roof and balustrade. The plan was very simple, with a peristyle flanked by two wings and two avant-corps, or sections in advance of the wings. It had a simplicity and purity of form that inspired similar palace buildings across Europe, from Prussia to Russia. Mansart also completed the Versailles Orangerie (1684–1686) in a similar style, surrounding a formal garden and pool. The gardens created by Andre Le Notre were designed to complement the architecture of the palace and to express, by it geometric alleys, pools, rows of the trees, flower beds and fountains, the mastery of the King over nature.[10]

The final piece of the Palace was the Chapel, begun in 1689 to the designs of Hardouin-Mansart and completed by Robert de Cotte in 1708–1710. The room was given more space and light by the use of classical columns instead of massive pillars, and by placing the supporting columns on an upper level.

Louis XV continued to add to the Palace, mostly with changes to the interior rooms. His major contribution was the Petit Trianon by Ange-Jacques Gabriel. Its austere architecture was a sign of the transition to Neoclassicism.

Religious architecture edit

The architecture of churches during the early French Classicism period evolved more slowly; the late Mannerist Gothic style, exemplified by the Church of Saint-Étienne-du-Mont by Claude Guérin (1606–21), was still the dominant style. However, between 1690 and 1755 twenty-four new church facades were built in Paris. Competitions for new church designs, particularly the Prix de Rome and the competition for the enlarging of Saint-Sulpice and Saint-Eustache in Paris, brought forward many original ideas.[14]

The first French church facade in the new style was for the church of St-Gervais-et-St-Protais (1616) by Salomon de Brosse. It featured, like Church of the Jesu in Rome, a facade with the three orders of columns, Doric, Ionic and Corinthian, arranged in stages one above the other. Another variant of the new style appeared in the main Jesuit church in Paris, the Church of Saint-Paul-Saint-Louis, inspired by the Jesuit Church of the Gesù in Rome. Designed by the Jesuit architects Etienne Martellange and François Derand, had two levels, with the lower level at the height of the chapels, and an upper level, with a second order of columns, and a fronton over the portal of the church. The upper level was supported by consoles in a reversed S form. The surface of the facade was decorated with statues in niches, and with renouncements. The interior plan was rectangual, with a large vaulted nave, flanked with chapels.[15]

The interiors of new parish churches, such as Saint-Sulpice, Saint-Louis-en-l'Île and Saint-Roch largely followed the traditional gothic floor-plan of Notre-Dame, though they did add façades and certain other decorative features from the Italian Baroque. Saint-Roch (1653–90), designed by Jacques Lemercier, had a Gothic plan but colorful Italian-style decoration.[16] To follow the advice of the Council of Trent to integrate themselves into the city's architecture, new churches were aligned with the street. rather than always facing east–west.[16]

The debut of the dome edit

The major innovation of French Baroque religious architecture was the introduction of the cupola or dome over the central nave, a style imported from the Italian Baroque. The dome of the Church of the Gesù in Rome, by Giacomo della Porta (1568–1584) served as the prototype. The first Parisian church to have a dome was the chapel of the whose facade is now found in the courtyard of the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts on rue Bonaparte in Paris. The next, larger dome was constructed at the Église Saint-Joseph-des-Carmes (1613–20) in the same neighborhood. A larger and still more impressive early dome was built by François Mansart for the Church the Visitation Saint-Marie (1632–34).[17]

Another innovative dome was built by Jacques Lemercier for the College of Sorbonne, beginning in 1635. This design featured a hemispherical dome on a tall octagonal drum, the first of its type in France, with four small cupolas in the angles of the Greek cross above the Corinthian order columns on the façade.

A much larger and higher dome on the Italian Baroque model was begun by François Mansart, then Jacques Lemercier and completed by Pierre Le Muet for the chapel of the royal hospital and abbey of Val-de-Grace (1645–1665). The facade has two levels of columns and pediments and a peristyle of detached columns, and the dome is decorated with an abundance of vaults, ribs, statues, contreforts, and ornaments, making it the most Italianate of French domes.[18]

The second part of the 17th century saw the beginning of two more important domes. The Chapel of the Collège des Quatre-Nations, (now the Institut de France by Louis Le Vau and François d'Orbay (1662–1668) was built with a bequest from Cardinal Mazarin across the Seine from Louvre, and contains his tomb. The most grand of the domes was that of Les Invalides, the chapel for the hospital of military veterans, built by Jules Hardouin-Mansart (1677–1706), both as a symbol of charity and of military glory. The dome is placed on a church in the form of a trek cross. The cube of the building is surmounted by a cylindrical column of two drums, giving the dome exceptional height. The dome itself is richly decorated with sculpture on the entablements as well as ornaments of gilded bronze between the vertical ribs of the dome.[18]

Residential architecture – the hôtel particulier edit

The residential building style known as the hôtel particulier reached its maturity during the Baroque era, particularly in Paris, where members of the nobility built their town houses. They were defined by Nicolas Catherinot in the Traité de l'architecture (1688) as "less beautiful than palaces and more beautiful than simple residences."[19] The early hôtels particuliers in Paris were influenced partly by Italian architecture and the model of the Luxembourg Palace, on a smaller scale. The early Baroque hôtel particulier was usually placed between a walled courtyard in the front and a garden in the back, with the entrance to the courtyard through a pavilion on the street. The Hôtel de Sully (1624–1630) in Paris, designed by Jean Androuet du Cerceau, is a good example of the early style, as is the Hôtel Carnavalet. While the Hôtel de Sully was originally planned to be built of brick and stone, it was finally built entirely of stone. The hôtels grew in size and complexity through the 17th century, with the appearance of the vestibule between 1635 and 1640. The newer houses also began to have two courtyards, one for ceremony (the cour d'honneur) and the other for more practical purposes, such as the stables. The façade of the residential building facing the garden came to occupy the entire width of the piece of land. New specialized kinds of rooms, such as dining rooms and salons, began to appear.[19] Notable examples of the French Baroque hôtels particuliers include the Hôtel Carnavalet, the Hôtel de Sully, the Hôtel de Beauvais (1655–1660), and the Hôtel de Soubise (1624–1639) (now occupied by the French National Archives). A notable example outside of Paris is the Palais Rohan, Strasbourg.

The residential square edit

The residential square, a group of houses with of identical size and identical architecture around a square, usually with a fountain in the middle, first based on the Italian model, appeared in Paris in the Place Royal (now Place des Vosges) between 1605 and 1613. The buildings had high mansard roofs, and tricolor facades of broke, stone, and slate. In the beginning, a statue of Louis XIII on horseback was placed in the center. A smaller square, Place Dauphine, originally with thirty-two houses, was built on the Île de la Cité next to the Pont Neuf between 1607 and 1610. It faced an equestrian statue of Henry IV of France.[20]

The next major urban square constructed in Paris was the Place des Victoires (1684–1697), a real estate development of seven large buildings in three segments around an oval square, with a monument to Louis XIV at its center. This was built by an enterprising entrepreneur and nobleman of the court, Jean-Baptiste Prédot, combined with the architect Jules Hardouin-Mansart. The new square was a showcases of the new monumental Style Louis XIV. The old brick and stone of the Henry IV squares was replaced by the Grand Style of monumental columns, which usually were part of the facade itself, rather than standing separately. All the buildings around the square were connected and built to the same height, in the same style. The ground floor featured a covered arcade for pedestrians.[21]

Between 1699 and 1702, another square was constructed also by Hardouin-Mansart. the Place Vendôme, In another innovation, this project was partially financed by the sale of lots around the square. All of these projects featured monumental facades in the Louis XIV style, giving a particular harmony to the squares.[22]

Louis XV followed the example of Louis XIV. In the later years of his reign, Louis constructed a major new square in the center of the city, Place Louis XV (now Place de la Concorde, with a harmonious row of new buildings designed by Ange-Jacques Gabriel. Following the example of the earlier squares, it featured an equestrian statue of Louis XV, which was pulled down during the French Revolution. Louis XV built other monumental squares following the same architectural model in the centers of Rennes and Bordeaux. Another notable square, Place Stanislas, was built in the city of Nancy, in Lorraine, shortly before that Duchy was formally attached to France.

See also edit

Notes and citations edit

  1. ^ Hopkins, Owen, Les Styles en Architecture (2014), pp. 84-87
  2. ^ Prina & Demartini 2006, p. 190.
  3. ^ a b Prina & Demartini 2006, p. 191.
  4. ^ Hopkins 2014, p. 84.
  5. ^ Berger 1993, pp. 20–27.
  6. ^ Summerson 1963, figure 47.
  7. ^ Berger 1993, pp. 51–52.
  8. ^ Renault and Lazé (2006), p. 55; Berger 1993, pp. .
  9. ^ Berger 1985.
  10. ^ a b Cabanne 1988, p. 30.
  11. ^ a b c Ayers 2004, pp. 336–337.
  12. ^ Cabanne 1988, pp. 30–31.
  13. ^ Ayers 2004, pp. 337–338.
  14. ^ Texier (2012) page 52
  15. ^ Texier (2012) pages 30-35
  16. ^ a b Texier 2012, pp. 30–31.
  17. ^ Texier 2012, pp. 34–35.
  18. ^ a b Ducher 1988, p. 124.
  19. ^ a b Texier 2012, pp. 32–33.
  20. ^ Texier 2012, pp. 28–29.
  21. ^ Texier, Simon (2012), pp. 38-39
  22. ^ Texier, Simon (2012), pp. 38-39

Bibliography edit

  • Ayers, Andrew (2004). The Architecture of Paris. Stuttgart, London: Edition Axel Menges. ISBN 9783930698967.
  • Berger, Robert W. (1985). Versailles: The Château of Louis XIV. University Park: The College Arts Association.
  • Berger, Robert W. (1993). The Palace of the Sun: The Louvre of Louis XIV. University Park: The Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 9780271008479.
  • Cabanne, Perre (1988), L'Art Classique et le Baroque, Paris: Larousse, ISBN 978-2-03-583324-2
  • Ducher, Robert (1988). Caractéristique des styles. Paris: Flammarion. ISBN 2-08-011539-1.
  • Hopkins, Owen (2014). Les styles en architecture. Dunod. ISBN 978-2-10-070689-1.
  • Lemerle, Frédérique & Yves Pauwels (2008). "Baroque Architecture", Flammarion, 2008.
  • Millon, Henry A., ed. (1999), The Triumph of the Baroque: Architecture in Europe, 1600–1750.
  • Prina, Francesca; Demartini, Elena (2006). Petite encylopédie de l'architecture. Paris: Solar. ISBN 2-263-04096-X.
  • Summerson, John (1963). The Classical Language of Architecture. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press. ISBN 9780262690126.
  • Texier, Simon (2012). Paris- Panorama de l'architecture. Parigramme. ISBN 978-2-84096-667-8.

french, baroque, architecture, usually, called, french, classicism, style, architecture, during, reigns, louis, xiii, 1610, 1643, louis, 1643, 1715, louis, 1715, 1774, preceded, french, renaissance, architecture, mannerism, followed, second, half, 18th, centur. French Baroque architecture usually called French classicism was a style of architecture during the reigns of Louis XIII 1610 1643 Louis XIV 1643 1715 and Louis XV 1715 1774 It was preceded by French Renaissance architecture and Mannerism and was followed in the second half of the 18th century by French Neoclassical architecture The style was originally inspired by the Italian Baroque architecture style but particularly under Louis XIV it gave greater emphasis to regularity the colossal order of facades and the use of colonnades and cupolas to symbolize the power and grandeur of the King Notable examples of the style include the Grand Trianon of the Palace of Versailles and the dome of Les Invalides in Paris In the final years of Louis XIV and the reign of Louis XV the colossal orders gradually disappeared the style became lighter and saw the introduction of wrought iron decoration in rocaille designs The period also saw the introduction of monumental urban squares in Paris and other cities notably Place Vendome and the Place de la Concorde The style profoundly influenced 18th century secular architecture throughout Europe the Palace of Versailles and the French formal garden were copied by other courts all over Europe 1 Palace of Versailles Contents 1 Early French Classicism 2 The Louvre facade 3 The Palace of Versailles 4 Religious architecture 5 The debut of the dome 6 Residential architecture the hotel particulier 7 The residential square 8 See also 9 Notes and citations 10 BibliographyEarly French Classicism editThe French Classicism was from the beginning an expression of the power and majesty of the Kings of France It proceeded deliberately in a different direction from Italy and the rest of Europe combining classical elements especially colossal orders of columns and avoiding the exuberant decoration that appeared on facades and interiors in Spain Germany and Central Europe It was used less frequently on churches and more often in the design of royal palaces and country residences Another distinctive element of the French Classicism was the integration of the architecture of the house with the formal gardens around it in what became known as the French formal garden 2 Salomon de Brosse 1571 1626 was one of the first French architects to adopt the style in the construction of the Palais du Luxembourg he built for the mother of Louis XIII Marie de Medici between 1615 and 1624 The Luxembourg Palace established a new pattern for royal residences with pavilions on the corners lateral wings and a grand central entrance surmounted by a cupola The walls feature colossal orders of columns with triangular pediments indicating the classical inspiration behind the French movement A traditional French feature was the high sloping mansard roof and the complex roofline Like the palaces of the Medicis in Rome the palace was surrounded by a large garden and fountains The interior design was also innovative the pavilions around the main block contained the apartments allowing a greater flexibility and functionality of the interior space 3 One of the most accomplished formulators of the new style was Francois Mansart a tireless perfectionist He was not the first to use the sloping mansard roof but he used it so effectively that it took his name In his design for the Chateau de Maisons in Maisons Laffitte 1630 51 Mansart showed the continuity between the French Renaissance style and the new style The structure is strictly symmetrical with an order applied to each story mostly in pilaster form The frontispiece crowned with a separate aggrandized roof is infused with remarkable plasticity and the whole ensemble reads like a three dimensional whole Mansart s structures are stripped of overblown decorative effects so typical of contemporary Rome Italian Baroque influence is muted and relegated to the field of decorative ornamentation Louis Le Vau was another central figure in the early French Classicism style He designed the Chateau of Vaux le Vicomte 1656 1661 for Nicolas Fouquet the Superintendent of Finances of the young Louis XIV The design of the chateau itself was similar to that of the Luxembourg Palace and the Palazzo Barberini in Rome What made it distinctive from earlier styles was the unity of its architecture interior and landscape around it Its facade featured stylized monumental columns wings combined with mansard roofs and a prominent dome in the Baroque style The interior was lavishly decorated with murals by Charles Le Brun and it was placed in the center of enormous formal gardens designed by Andre Le Notre laid out in geometric patterns paths flower beds fountains and reflecting pools which seemed to extend the architecture of the house in every direction 4 The grand salon of the building opened out onto the garden a feature which thereafter became a regular feature of Baroque palaces After seeing the lavishness of the building the King dismissed and imprisoned Fouquet took possession of the house for the crown and soon put Le Vau to work to create his own palace in Versailles 3 The same three artists scaled this concept to monumental proportions in the royal hunting lodge and later main Palace of Versailles 1661 1690 On a far grander scale the palace is a hypertrophied and somewhat repetitive version of Vaux le Vicomte It was both the most grandiose and the most imitated residential building of the 17th century Mannheim Nordkirchen and Drottningholm were among many foreign residences for which Versailles provided a model nbsp Chateau de Maisons Laffitte by Francois Mansart 1630 51 nbsp Palais du Luxembourg by Salomon de Brosse 1615 1620 nbsp Vaux le Vicomte near Paris by Louis Le Vau and Andre Le Notre 1656 1661 The Louvre facade editIn 1665 the chief minister of Louis XIV Jean Colbert invited the most famous architect and sculptor of the Italian Baroque Gian Lorenzo Bernini to Paris to propose a design for the new east wing of the Louvre located on the eastern side of the Cour Carree Square Courtyard This design would have aligned the architecture of Paris to the Italian Baroque style However in the end Louis turned instead to French designers He wanted a design that would be distinctly French rather than a copy of the Italian style In April 1667 he gave the commission to a committee the Petit Conseil consisting of Louis Le Vau Charles Le Brun and Claude Perrault and the three men designed the new facade together 5 It featured the giant order that is a long row of double columns two stories high resting on top of a massive lower level 6 with tall segmental arched windows modeled on those used for the Renaissance style Lescot Wing 7 It had a flat roof concealed by a balustrade with a triangular pediment in the center over the main entry In 1668 a decision was made to double the width of the south wing resulting in the construction a new facade on the south facing the Seine Perrault also designed a new facade on the interior of the court facing west and a matching new facade on the north 8 nbsp Proposed Baroque east facade of Louvre by Gian Lorenzo Bernini nbsp East facade of the LouvreThe Palace of Versailles editThe most important showcase of the French Classicism was the Palace of Versailles It was begun in 1624 by Louis XIII as a hunting lodge In 1634 Louis XIII had it enlarged into a chateau by his chief architect and engineer Philibert Le Roy In 1661 Louis XIV decided to enlarge it further without destroying the original He commissioned Louis Le Vau and Charles le Brun as his architect and designer and assigned Andre Le Notre to create a grand formal garden that could be viewed from the Chateau on the model of Vaux le Vicomte When Le Vau died in 1670 the project was given to his assistant Francois d Orbay who completed the initial phase in 1674 9 10 The new palace surrounded the old brick chateau with new wings the north south and to the rear The facade like the new Louvre wing featured colossal order columns while the roof was flat with a terrance decorated with balustrades pilasters balconies statues and trophies Beginning in 1674 75 Le Brun created the interior A small army of painters sculptors and decorators went to work using marble polychrome stone bronze mirrors and gilded stucco Le Brun himself painted the ceiling The Hall of Mirrors constructed in 1678 1680 by Jules Hardouin Mansart the nephew of Francois Mansart overlooked the new garden It was also decorated by Le Brun who completed it in 1684 11 after which it became the symbol of the entire French Baroque style The new Palace was open to almost any visitor and became an immense theatre where the King carried out his ceremonies with meticulous protocol in public view 12 nbsp Garden facade of the first Chateau by Philibert Le Roy 1634 nbsp Marble Court of the enlarged Chateau as modified by Jules Hardouin Mansart c 1680 13 nbsp Hall of Mirrors at Palace of Versailles decorated by Charles Le Brun 1678 1684 11 nbsp The garden facade by Louis Le Vau 1668 1674 as modified by Jules Hardouin Mansart 1678 1680 11 Louis continued to add to the Palace through the end of his reign In 1687 Jules Hardouin Mansart and then Robert de Cotte erected the Grand Trianon on the model of an Italian building the Marble Trianon It had a single floor decorated with plaster and marble with a flat roof and balustrade The plan was very simple with a peristyle flanked by two wings and two avant corps or sections in advance of the wings It had a simplicity and purity of form that inspired similar palace buildings across Europe from Prussia to Russia Mansart also completed the Versailles Orangerie 1684 1686 in a similar style surrounding a formal garden and pool The gardens created by Andre Le Notre were designed to complement the architecture of the palace and to express by it geometric alleys pools rows of the trees flower beds and fountains the mastery of the King over nature 10 The final piece of the Palace was the Chapel begun in 1689 to the designs of Hardouin Mansart and completed by Robert de Cotte in 1708 1710 The room was given more space and light by the use of classical columns instead of massive pillars and by placing the supporting columns on an upper level Louis XV continued to add to the Palace mostly with changes to the interior rooms His major contribution was the Petit Trianon by Ange Jacques Gabriel Its austere architecture was a sign of the transition to Neoclassicism nbsp Chapel of the Palace of Versailles by Jules Hardouin Mansart and Robert de Cotte 1689 1710 nbsp The Grand Trianon by Jules Hardouin Mansart and Robert de Cotte 1687 88 nbsp Versailles Orangerie by Jules Hardouin Mansart nbsp The Petit Trianon by Ange Jacques Gabriel 1762 1768 Religious architecture editThe architecture of churches during the early French Classicism period evolved more slowly the late Mannerist Gothic style exemplified by the Church of Saint Etienne du Mont by Claude Guerin 1606 21 was still the dominant style However between 1690 and 1755 twenty four new church facades were built in Paris Competitions for new church designs particularly the Prix de Rome and the competition for the enlarging of Saint Sulpice and Saint Eustache in Paris brought forward many original ideas 14 The first French church facade in the new style was for the church of St Gervais et St Protais 1616 by Salomon de Brosse It featured like Church of the Jesu in Rome a facade with the three orders of columns Doric Ionic and Corinthian arranged in stages one above the other Another variant of the new style appeared in the main Jesuit church in Paris the Church of Saint Paul Saint Louis inspired by the Jesuit Church of the Gesu in Rome Designed by the Jesuit architects Etienne Martellange and Francois Derand had two levels with the lower level at the height of the chapels and an upper level with a second order of columns and a fronton over the portal of the church The upper level was supported by consoles in a reversed S form The surface of the facade was decorated with statues in niches and with renouncements The interior plan was rectangual with a large vaulted nave flanked with chapels 15 The interiors of new parish churches such as Saint Sulpice Saint Louis en l Ile and Saint Roch largely followed the traditional gothic floor plan of Notre Dame though they did add facades and certain other decorative features from the Italian Baroque Saint Roch 1653 90 designed by Jacques Lemercier had a Gothic plan but colorful Italian style decoration 16 To follow the advice of the Council of Trent to integrate themselves into the city s architecture new churches were aligned with the street rather than always facing east west 16 nbsp The church of Saint Etienne du Mont by Claude Guerin in the late Mannerist Gothic style 1606 21 nbsp The Church of St Gervais et St Protais the first Paris church with a facade in the new Baroque style 1616 20 nbsp The Church of Saint Paul Saint Louis 1627 41 by Etienne Martellange and Francois Derand nbsp Interior of Saint Paul Saint Louis 1627 41 nbsp Church of Saint Roch 1653 90 by Jacques LemercierThe debut of the dome editThe major innovation of French Baroque religious architecture was the introduction of the cupola or dome over the central nave a style imported from the Italian Baroque The dome of the Church of the Gesu in Rome by Giacomo della Porta 1568 1584 served as the prototype The first Parisian church to have a dome was the chapel of the whose facade is now found in the courtyard of the Ecole nationale superieure des Beaux Arts on rue Bonaparte in Paris The next larger dome was constructed at the Eglise Saint Joseph des Carmes 1613 20 in the same neighborhood A larger and still more impressive early dome was built by Francois Mansart for the Church the Visitation Saint Marie 1632 34 17 Another innovative dome was built by Jacques Lemercier for the College of Sorbonne beginning in 1635 This design featured a hemispherical dome on a tall octagonal drum the first of its type in France with four small cupolas in the angles of the Greek cross above the Corinthian order columns on the facade A much larger and higher dome on the Italian Baroque model was begun by Francois Mansart then Jacques Lemercier and completed by Pierre Le Muet for the chapel of the royal hospital and abbey of Val de Grace 1645 1665 The facade has two levels of columns and pediments and a peristyle of detached columns and the dome is decorated with an abundance of vaults ribs statues contreforts and ornaments making it the most Italianate of French domes 18 The second part of the 17th century saw the beginning of two more important domes The Chapel of the College des Quatre Nations now the Institut de France by Louis Le Vau and Francois d Orbay 1662 1668 was built with a bequest from Cardinal Mazarin across the Seine from Louvre and contains his tomb The most grand of the domes was that of Les Invalides the chapel for the hospital of military veterans built by Jules Hardouin Mansart 1677 1706 both as a symbol of charity and of military glory The dome is placed on a church in the form of a trek cross The cube of the building is surmounted by a cylindrical column of two drums giving the dome exceptional height The dome itself is richly decorated with sculpture on the entablements as well as ornaments of gilded bronze between the vertical ribs of the dome 18 nbsp Church of the Convent of the Visitation by Francois Mansart 1632 34 nbsp Church of Val de Grace by Francois Mansart Jacques Lemercier and Pierre Le Muet 1624 1669 nbsp Eglise Saint Roch Paris by Jacques Lemercier 1653 90 nbsp Chapel of the College of Sorbonne by Jacques Lemercier 1635 nbsp College des Quatres Nations by Louis Le Vau and Francois d Orbay 1662 1668 nbsp Les Invalides by Jules Hardouin Mansart 1677 1706 Residential architecture the hotel particulier editThe residential building style known as the hotel particulier reached its maturity during the Baroque era particularly in Paris where members of the nobility built their town houses They were defined by Nicolas Catherinot in the Traite de l architecture 1688 as less beautiful than palaces and more beautiful than simple residences 19 The early hotels particuliers in Paris were influenced partly by Italian architecture and the model of the Luxembourg Palace on a smaller scale The early Baroque hotel particulier was usually placed between a walled courtyard in the front and a garden in the back with the entrance to the courtyard through a pavilion on the street The Hotel de Sully 1624 1630 in Paris designed by Jean Androuet du Cerceau is a good example of the early style as is the Hotel Carnavalet While the Hotel de Sully was originally planned to be built of brick and stone it was finally built entirely of stone The hotels grew in size and complexity through the 17th century with the appearance of the vestibule between 1635 and 1640 The newer houses also began to have two courtyards one for ceremony the cour d honneur and the other for more practical purposes such as the stables The facade of the residential building facing the garden came to occupy the entire width of the piece of land New specialized kinds of rooms such as dining rooms and salons began to appear 19 Notable examples of the French Baroque hotels particuliers include the Hotel Carnavalet the Hotel de Sully the Hotel de Beauvais 1655 1660 and the Hotel de Soubise 1624 1639 now occupied by the French National Archives A notable example outside of Paris is the Palais Rohan Strasbourg nbsp Hotel de Sully 1624 1639 nbsp Hotel de Beauvais 1655 1660 nbsp Hotel Carnavalet nbsp The Palais Rohan StrasbourgThe residential square editThe residential square a group of houses with of identical size and identical architecture around a square usually with a fountain in the middle first based on the Italian model appeared in Paris in the Place Royal now Place des Vosges between 1605 and 1613 The buildings had high mansard roofs and tricolor facades of broke stone and slate In the beginning a statue of Louis XIII on horseback was placed in the center A smaller square Place Dauphine originally with thirty two houses was built on the Ile de la Cite next to the Pont Neuf between 1607 and 1610 It faced an equestrian statue of Henry IV of France 20 The next major urban square constructed in Paris was the Place des Victoires 1684 1697 a real estate development of seven large buildings in three segments around an oval square with a monument to Louis XIV at its center This was built by an enterprising entrepreneur and nobleman of the court Jean Baptiste Predot combined with the architect Jules Hardouin Mansart The new square was a showcases of the new monumental Style Louis XIV The old brick and stone of the Henry IV squares was replaced by the Grand Style of monumental columns which usually were part of the facade itself rather than standing separately All the buildings around the square were connected and built to the same height in the same style The ground floor featured a covered arcade for pedestrians 21 Between 1699 and 1702 another square was constructed also by Hardouin Mansart the Place Vendome In another innovation this project was partially financed by the sale of lots around the square All of these projects featured monumental facades in the Louis XIV style giving a particular harmony to the squares 22 Louis XV followed the example of Louis XIV In the later years of his reign Louis constructed a major new square in the center of the city Place Louis XV now Place de la Concorde with a harmonious row of new buildings designed by Ange Jacques Gabriel Following the example of the earlier squares it featured an equestrian statue of Louis XV which was pulled down during the French Revolution Louis XV built other monumental squares following the same architectural model in the centers of Rennes and Bordeaux Another notable square Place Stanislas was built in the city of Nancy in Lorraine shortly before that Duchy was formally attached to France nbsp Place des Victoires 1684 1697 by Jules Hardouin Mansart nbsp Place Vendome 1699 1702 by Jules Hardouin Mansart nbsp Design for the Place Louis XV by Ange Jacques Gabriel 1758 nbsp Place de la Bourse in Bordeaux by Ange Jacques Gabriel 1730 1775 nbsp Nancy Place Stanislas E Here 1752 1760 jpgSee also edit nbsp France portal nbsp Architecture portalStyle Louis XIV Style Louis XV Architecture of Paris French Baroque and ClassicismNotes and citations edit Hopkins Owen Les Styles en Architecture 2014 pp 84 87 Prina amp Demartini 2006 p 190 a b Prina amp Demartini 2006 p 191 Hopkins 2014 p 84 Berger 1993 pp 20 27 Summerson 1963 figure 47 Berger 1993 pp 51 52 Renault and Laze 2006 p 55 Berger 1993 pp Berger 1985 a b Cabanne 1988 p 30 a b c Ayers 2004 pp 336 337 Cabanne 1988 pp 30 31 Ayers 2004 pp 337 338 Texier 2012 page 52 Texier 2012 pages 30 35 a b Texier 2012 pp 30 31 Texier 2012 pp 34 35 a b Ducher 1988 p 124 a b Texier 2012 pp 32 33 Texier 2012 pp 28 29 Texier Simon 2012 pp 38 39 Texier Simon 2012 pp 38 39 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Baroque architecture in France Bibliography editAyers Andrew 2004 The Architecture of Paris Stuttgart London Edition Axel Menges ISBN 9783930698967 Berger Robert W 1985 Versailles The Chateau of Louis XIV University Park The College Arts Association Berger Robert W 1993 The Palace of the Sun The Louvre of Louis XIV University Park The Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 9780271008479 Cabanne Perre 1988 L Art Classique et le Baroque Paris Larousse ISBN 978 2 03 583324 2 Ducher Robert 1988 Caracteristique des styles Paris Flammarion ISBN 2 08 011539 1 Hopkins Owen 2014 Les styles en architecture Dunod ISBN 978 2 10 070689 1 Lemerle Frederique amp Yves Pauwels 2008 Baroque Architecture Flammarion 2008 Millon Henry A ed 1999 The Triumph of the Baroque Architecture in Europe 1600 1750 Prina Francesca Demartini Elena 2006 Petite encylopedie de l architecture Paris Solar ISBN 2 263 04096 X Summerson John 1963 The Classical Language of Architecture Cambridge Massachusetts The MIT Press ISBN 9780262690126 Texier Simon 2012 Paris Panorama de l architecture Parigramme ISBN 978 2 84096 667 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title French Baroque architecture amp oldid 1185644623, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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