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Louvre Colonnade

The Louvre Colonnade is the easternmost façade of the Palais du Louvre in Paris. It has been celebrated as the foremost masterpiece of French Architectural Classicism since its construction, mostly between 1667 and 1674. The design, dominated by two loggias with trabeated colonnades of coupled giant columns, was created by a committee of three, the Petit Conseil, consisting of Louis Le Vau, Charles Le Brun, and Claude Perrault. Louis Le Vau's brother, François Le Vau, also contributed. Cast in a restrained classicizing baroque manner, it interprets rules laid down by the ancient Roman architect Vitruvius, whose works Perrault translated into French (1673).[1] Its flat-roofline design, previously associated with Italy and unprecedented in France, was immensely influential.[2]

The Louvre Colonnade

Description edit

Little that could be called Baroque can be identified in the Colonnade's cool classicism that looks back to the 16th century. The use of one central and two terminal pavilions is typically French, while the main entrance, a pedimented avant-corps, resembles a triumphal arch or temple front. The simple character of the ground floor basement sets off the paired Corinthian columns, modeled strictly according to Vitruvius, against a shadowed void. This scheme of coupled columns on a high podium goes back as far as Bramante's House of Raphael (1512).[3] The effect of the Colonnade has been likened to that of an ancient Roman temple whose elevations have "been flattened, as it were, into a single plane."[4] Crowned by an uncompromising Italian balustrade along its distinctly non-French flat roof, the whole ensemble represents a ground-breaking departure in French architecture.

History of the design edit

Louis Le Vau, the King's First Architect at the time of the death of Cardinal Mazarin in 1661, completed the south wing of the Louvre's Cour Carrée in 1663. He had already started designing the east wing around 1659 and by late 1663 began laying the foundation.[6]

On 1 January 1664, Jean-Baptiste Colbert purchased the post of Surintendant des Bâtiments du Roi from Antoine de Ratabon and suddenly halted all work on the east wing.[7] He invited other French architects to submit designs, in effect starting a competition. He later extended his invitation to four Roman architects, including Pietro da Cortona and Gian Lorenzo Bernini, and sent them Le Vau's designs. Among the French projects submitted at that time were two of special interest: one (lost) shown anonymously by Claude Perrault, a physician and scientist, and one by François Le Vau, Louis Le Vau's younger brother and an accomplished architect in his own right.[8]

Nevertheless, Colbert selected Bernini based on two preliminary projects and invited him to Paris to further revise and complete his designs. Bernini arrived in June 1665 and stayed until late October. During his stay he sculpted a portrait bust of Louis XIV, which is now in the Salon of Diana at the Palace of Versailles. Bernini's design for the Louvre was very Italianate and ambitious, encompassing the entire building rather than just the east wing. The foundation cornerstone was laid at a royal ceremony a few days before Bernini left for Rome.[9]

Bernini's plans were not well received by French architects, who objected and eventually won the upper hand. In April 1667, Colbert, with the king's approval, appointed Louis Le Vau, Charles Le Brun, and Claude Perrault to a committee, the Petit Conseil, to prepare new designs.[13] Charles Perrault, Claude Perrault's younger brother and Colbert's chief assistant, acted as the secretary of the committee and probably wrote the Registre ou Journal des déliberations..., which records the activities of the committee during April and May 1667.[14] The Registre begins by describing Colbert's dissatisfaction with the French and Italian projects and his decision to create a committee "to allow for mutual consultation."[14] Le Vau, Le Brun, and Perrault are instructed to work together "unanimously and conjointly on all designs for the construction of the Palais du Louvre, so the designs will be regarded as the work of the three equally, and for conservation of good collaboration, none should spoil by claiming to be the particular author to the detriment of the others."[15]

After several meetings, the Petit Conseil drew up two schemes, and, according to the Registre, "one was adorned with an order of columns forming a peristyle or gallery above the first floor [i.e., the ground floor], and the other was simpler and more unified, without an order of columns".[16] The architects of the designs were not identified.[17] On 14 May, at the royal Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye,[17] two paintings[18] of the proposals were shown to Louis XIV, who chose the design with the colonnade.[17] In July 1667 Colbert finally informed Bernini that his plans had been abandoned.[19] The new façade was begun that summer and was mostly complete in 1674, when the stones of the central pediment were hoisted into place.[20]

The authorship of the Colonnade's design has remained controversial ever since. Le Vau may have been responsible for the use of the colonnade, possibly based on the 1664 design of his brother François, which employed paired, free-standing columns.[21] A change in the order from Composite to Corinthian may have been due to the influence of Roland Fréart de Chambray, who was called to Paris to become a member of the Petit Conseil in 1668.[22] At some point that same year the decision was made to double the width of the south wing. This resulted in the widening and redesign of both the south and north pavilions of the east façade.[23] Perrault probably became the main designer in 1668 and was responsible for the final design.[24]

The severely designed colonnade overlooking the Place du Louvre — for which buildings including the Hôtel du Petit-Bourbon were demolished to provide the necessary urban space — became widely celebrated.

The pediment sculpture of 'Minerva surrounded by the Muses of Victory crowning the bust of Napoleon' is by François-Frédéric Lemot (1808-1810). Napoleon was later replaced by Louis XIV, although the face was kept.

Interior edit

Between 1807 and 1811,[25]: 17  Percier and Fontaine created monumental staircases at the southern and northern ends of the wing behind the Colonnade, and projected a suite of prestige rooms between the two staircases on the first floor. The architectural sculpture of the southern staircase (Escalier du Midi) were created in the early 1810s by François Gérard, Auguste Marie Taunay, Augustin Félix Fortin, and Charles Antoine Callamard [fr].[25]

Digging out of the moat edit

 
The lifting of the Louvre pediment stones, 1674, engraving by Sébastien Leclerc

In 1964, the French Minister of Culture, André Malraux, ordered the digging out of the dry moat in front of the Colonnade. A characteristic feature of pre-classical French architecture, it is shown in nearly every project and early drawing of the east façade, and its reexcavation revealed the original soubassement, or podium (see the engraving from Blondel's book). The moat may have been filled in around 1674 to facilitate construction (see the engraving by Sébastien Leclerc) and not restored due to lack of funds to build the contrescarpe after Louis XIV's attention shifted to the Palace of Versailles. However, in 1981 Germain Bazin argued that the reconstruction of the moat was misguided, since for aesthetic reasons Louis XIV had never wanted it.[26]

Influence edit

For centuries, the Colonnade has provided a model for many grand edifices in Europe and America:

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Neumann 2013, pp. 296–297.
  2. ^ Rochelle Ziskin (March 1994), "The Place de Nos Conquêtes and the Unraveling of the Myth of Louis XIV", The Art Bulletin, 76:1 (1), Taylor & Francis: 152, doi:10.2307/3046007, JSTOR 3046007
  3. ^ Summerson 1963, plates 14 and 47.
  4. ^ Neumann 2013, p. 297.
  5. ^ Wischermann 1997, p. 35.
  6. ^ Berger 1994, pp. 28–29.
  7. ^ Berger 1993, p. 20; Berger 1994, p. 20.
  8. ^ Berger 1994, pp. 20, 28–29.
  9. ^ Berger 1994, p. 33.
  10. ^ The drawing is undated. It is reproduced by: Blunt 1953, plate 155a; Laprade 1960, Plate VI 2b (asserts François d'Orbay is the author); Tadgell 1980, fig. 66; Pérouse de Montclos 1989, fig. 288; Berger 1993, fig. 24; Berger 1994, fig. 18; Gargiani 1998, fig. 166; Blunt & Beresford 1999, fig. 270; and Petzet 2000, fig. 62. The following support a 1662–1664 date: Blunt 1953, Laprade 1960, Pérouse de Montclos 1989, Berger 1993 and 1994, Feldmann 1996, Petzet 2000, and Neumann 2013, although two (Blunt and Petzet) emphasize the evidence is circumstantial and uncertain. Petzet also gives 1667 or 1668 as an alternative. Tadgell dates the drawing to 1667 or 1668. He is supported by Gargiani and partly by Beresford, who gives "c. 1668?". Cojannot 2003, p. 237, supports the later date in a review of Gargiani's book.
  11. ^ Neumann 2013, p. 296.
  12. ^ Blunt 1999, p. 221.
  13. ^ Berger 1993, pp. 25–26; Neumann 2013, pp. 296–297; Summerson 1963, plate 47; Wischermann 1997, p. 35; and Bottineau-Fuchs 1996, p. 162. Sutcliffe 1993, p. 31, credits Perrault alone.
  14. ^ a b Berger 1993, p. 26.
  15. ^ Petzet 2000, p. 561, reproduces the Registre in the original French. The quote in French is: "...ils travaillassant unanimement & conjointement à tous les dessein qu'il y auroit à faire pour l'achevement du Palais du Louvre, en sorte que ses desseins seroient regardés comme l'ouvrage d'eux trois également, & que pour conserver l'union et bonne intelligence, aucun ne pourroit s'en dire l'auteur particulierement au préjudice des autres."
  16. ^ Berger 1993 p. 26. Berger's translation with the bracketed explanatory material added by him.
  17. ^ a b c Berger 1993, p. 27.
  18. ^ Burchard 2016, p. 57. Burchard writes, "one can assume that Le Brun would have used this medium to his advantage."
  19. ^ Bottineau-Fuchs 1996, p. 162.
  20. ^ Berger 1993, p. 48.
  21. ^ Neumann 2013, p. 297, Berger 1994, pp. 34–35.
  22. ^ Berger 1994, p. 35.
  23. ^ Berger 1993, p. 35.
  24. ^ Berger 1994, p. 35; Ayers 2003, pp. 31 and 36.
  25. ^ a b Christiane Aulanier (1961). Le Musée Charles X et le Département des Antiquités Egyptiennes (PDF). Paris: Editions des Musées Nationaux. p. 18.
  26. ^ Berger 1993, p. 63. Berger cites Whiteley & Braham 1969 and Bazin 1981.
  27. ^ Ayers 2003, p. 37.
  28. ^ "William Thornton (1759–1828)". Library of Congress. Retrieved July 7, 2007.

Bibliography edit

  • Ayers, Andrew (2004). The Architecture of Paris. Stuttgart; London: Edition Axel Menges. ISBN 9783930698967.
  • Bazin, Germain (1981). "L'erreur du fossé du Louvre". Le Monde, 20 August 1981, p. 2.
  • Berger, Robert W. (1993). The Palace of the Sun: The Louvre of Louis XIV. University Park: The Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 9780271008479.
  • Berger, Robert W. (1994). A Royal Passion: Louis XIV as Patron of Architecture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521440297.
  • Blunt, Anthony (1953). Art and Architecture in France 1500 to 1700. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin Books. OCLC 1019966574.
  • Blunt, Anthony (1999). Art and Architecture in France, 1500–1700, fifth edition revised by Richard Beresford. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300077353. ISBN 9780300077483 (paperback).
  • Bottineau-Fuchs, Yves (1996). "Paris, V. Buildings, 6. Palais du Louvre, (ii) Post-medieval", vol. 24, pp. 161–163, in The Dictionary of Art, edited by Jane Turner, reprinted with minor corrections in 1998. New York: Grove. ISBN 9781884446009.
  • Burchard, Wolf (2016). The Sovereign Artist: Charles Le Brun and the Image of Louis XIV. London: Paul Holbertonn Publishing. ISBN 9781911300052.
  • Cojannot, Alexandre (2003). "Claude Perrault et le Louvre de Louis XIV. À propos de deux livres récents," Bulletin Monumental, vol. 161, no. 3, pp. 231–239.
  • Feldmann, Dietrich (1996). "Le Vau: (2) François Le Vau", vol. 19, pp. 267–268, in The Dictionary of Art, 34 volumes, edited by Jane Turner. New York: Grove. ISBN 9781884446009.
  • Gargiani, Roberto (1998). Idea e costruzione del Louvre. Parigi cruciale nella storia dell'architettura moderna europea. Florence: Alinea. ISBN 8881252538.
  • Laprade, Albert (1960). François d'Orbay: Architecte de Louis XIV. Paris: Éditions Vincent, Fréal. OCLC 562063179, 780531730, 1096782.
  • Neuman, Robert (2013). Baroque and Rococo Art and Architecture. Boston: Pearson. ISBN 9780205832262.
  • Pérouse de Montclos, Jean-Marie (1989). Histoire de l'architecture française. De la Renaissance à la Révolution. Paris: Mengès. ISBN 2856203000.
  • Petzet, Michael (2000). Claude Perrault und die Architektur des Sonnenkönigs. Der Louvre König Ludwigs XIV. und das Werk Claude Perraults. Munich/Berlin: Deutscher Kunstverlag. ISBN 3422062645.
  • Summerson, John (1963). The Classical Language of Architecture. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press. ISBN 9780262690126.
  • Sutcliffe, Anthony (1993). Paris: An Architectural History. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300054459.
  • Tadgell, Christopher (1980). "Claude Perrault, François Le Vau and the Louvre Colonnade", The Burlington Magazine, vol. 122, no. 926 (May 1980), pp. 326–337.
  • Whiteley, Mary; Braham, Allan (1969). "Les soubassements de l'aile orientale du Louvre". Revue de l'art, vol. 1, no. 4, pp. 30–43.
  • Wischermann, Heinfried (1997). Paris: An Architectural Guide. Venice: Arsenale Editrice. ISBN 8877431628.

48°51′36.59″N 2°20′22.71″E / 48.8601639°N 2.3396417°E / 48.8601639; 2.3396417

louvre, colonnade, easternmost, façade, palais, louvre, paris, been, celebrated, foremost, masterpiece, french, architectural, classicism, since, construction, mostly, between, 1667, 1674, design, dominated, loggias, with, trabeated, colonnades, coupled, giant. The Louvre Colonnade is the easternmost facade of the Palais du Louvre in Paris It has been celebrated as the foremost masterpiece of French Architectural Classicism since its construction mostly between 1667 and 1674 The design dominated by two loggias with trabeated colonnades of coupled giant columns was created by a committee of three the Petit Conseil consisting of Louis Le Vau Charles Le Brun and Claude Perrault Louis Le Vau s brother Francois Le Vau also contributed Cast in a restrained classicizing baroque manner it interprets rules laid down by the ancient Roman architect Vitruvius whose works Perrault translated into French 1673 1 Its flat roofline design previously associated with Italy and unprecedented in France was immensely influential 2 The Louvre Colonnade Contents 1 Description 2 History of the design 3 Interior 4 Digging out of the moat 5 Influence 6 See also 7 Notes 8 BibliographyDescription editLittle that could be called Baroque can be identified in the Colonnade s cool classicism that looks back to the 16th century The use of one central and two terminal pavilions is typically French while the main entrance a pedimented avant corps resembles a triumphal arch or temple front The simple character of the ground floor basement sets off the paired Corinthian columns modeled strictly according to Vitruvius against a shadowed void This scheme of coupled columns on a high podium goes back as far as Bramante s House of Raphael 1512 3 The effect of the Colonnade has been likened to that of an ancient Roman temple whose elevations have been flattened as it were into a single plane 4 Crowned by an uncompromising Italian balustrade along its distinctly non French flat roof the whole ensemble represents a ground breaking departure in French architecture nbsp The 183 metre 5 long east facade in 2005History of the design editLouis Le Vau the King s First Architect at the time of the death of Cardinal Mazarin in 1661 completed the south wing of the Louvre s Cour Carree in 1663 He had already started designing the east wing around 1659 and by late 1663 began laying the foundation 6 On 1 January 1664 Jean Baptiste Colbert purchased the post of Surintendant des Batiments du Roi from Antoine de Ratabon and suddenly halted all work on the east wing 7 He invited other French architects to submit designs in effect starting a competition He later extended his invitation to four Roman architects including Pietro da Cortona and Gian Lorenzo Bernini and sent them Le Vau s designs Among the French projects submitted at that time were two of special interest one lost shown anonymously by Claude Perrault a physician and scientist and one by Francois Le Vau Louis Le Vau s younger brother and an accomplished architect in his own right 8 Nevertheless Colbert selected Bernini based on two preliminary projects and invited him to Paris to further revise and complete his designs Bernini arrived in June 1665 and stayed until late October During his stay he sculpted a portrait bust of Louis XIV which is now in the Salon of Diana at the Palace of Versailles Bernini s design for the Louvre was very Italianate and ambitious encompassing the entire building rather than just the east wing The foundation cornerstone was laid at a royal ceremony a few days before Bernini left for Rome 9 nbsp Drawing by Francois Le Vau which may be his proposal of 1664 10 nbsp Bernini s first project 1664 drawing Musee du Louvre 11 nbsp Bernini s third project 1665 engraved by Jean Marot 12 Bernini s plans were not well received by French architects who objected and eventually won the upper hand In April 1667 Colbert with the king s approval appointed Louis Le Vau Charles Le Brun and Claude Perrault to a committee the Petit Conseil to prepare new designs 13 Charles Perrault Claude Perrault s younger brother and Colbert s chief assistant acted as the secretary of the committee and probably wrote the Registre ou Journal des deliberations which records the activities of the committee during April and May 1667 14 The Registre begins by describing Colbert s dissatisfaction with the French and Italian projects and his decision to create a committee to allow for mutual consultation 14 Le Vau Le Brun and Perrault are instructed to work together unanimously and conjointly on all designs for the construction of the Palais du Louvre so the designs will be regarded as the work of the three equally and for conservation of good collaboration none should spoil by claiming to be the particular author to the detriment of the others 15 After several meetings the Petit Conseil drew up two schemes and according to the Registre one was adorned with an order of columns forming a peristyle or gallery above the first floor i e the ground floor and the other was simpler and more unified without an order of columns 16 The architects of the designs were not identified 17 On 14 May at the royal Chateau de Saint Germain en Laye 17 two paintings 18 of the proposals were shown to Louis XIV who chose the design with the colonnade 17 In July 1667 Colbert finally informed Bernini that his plans had been abandoned 19 The new facade was begun that summer and was mostly complete in 1674 when the stones of the central pediment were hoisted into place 20 The authorship of the Colonnade s design has remained controversial ever since Le Vau may have been responsible for the use of the colonnade possibly based on the 1664 design of his brother Francois which employed paired free standing columns 21 A change in the order from Composite to Corinthian may have been due to the influence of Roland Freart de Chambray who was called to Paris to become a member of the Petit Conseil in 1668 22 At some point that same year the decision was made to double the width of the south wing This resulted in the widening and redesign of both the south and north pavilions of the east facade 23 Perrault probably became the main designer in 1668 and was responsible for the final design 24 The severely designed colonnade overlooking the Place du Louvre for which buildings including the Hotel du Petit Bourbon were demolished to provide the necessary urban space became widely celebrated The pediment sculpture of Minerva surrounded by the Muses of Victory crowning the bust of Napoleon is by Francois Frederic Lemot 1808 1810 Napoleon was later replaced by Louis XIV although the face was kept nbsp Engraving of the east facade from Blondel s Architecture francoise 1756Interior editBetween 1807 and 1811 25 17 Percier and Fontaine created monumental staircases at the southern and northern ends of the wing behind the Colonnade and projected a suite of prestige rooms between the two staircases on the first floor The architectural sculpture of the southern staircase Escalier du Midi were created in the early 1810s by Francois Gerard Auguste Marie Taunay Augustin Felix Fortin and Charles Antoine Callamard fr 25 Digging out of the moat edit nbsp The lifting of the Louvre pediment stones 1674 engraving by Sebastien Leclerc In 1964 the French Minister of Culture Andre Malraux ordered the digging out of the dry moat in front of the Colonnade A characteristic feature of pre classical French architecture it is shown in nearly every project and early drawing of the east facade and its reexcavation revealed the original soubassement or podium see the engraving from Blondel s book The moat may have been filled in around 1674 to facilitate construction see the engraving by Sebastien Leclerc and not restored due to lack of funds to build the contrescarpe after Louis XIV s attention shifted to the Palace of Versailles However in 1981 Germain Bazin argued that the reconstruction of the moat was misguided since for aesthetic reasons Louis XIV had never wanted it 26 Influence editFor centuries the Colonnade has provided a model for many grand edifices in Europe and America In Paris Ange Jacques Gabriel s buildings on the Place de la Concorde 1755 1775 and the principal facade of Charles Garnier s Opera 1860 1875 27 The central part of the East and West Fronts of the United States Capitol 1792 1811 in Washington DC 28 The Raczynski Library 1822 1828 in Poznan The Metropolitan Museum 1874 in New York City The original Pennsylvania Station 1910 in New York City War Memorial Opera House 1932 San Francisco California USASee also editQuai du LouvreNotes edit Neumann 2013 pp 296 297 Rochelle Ziskin March 1994 The Place de Nos Conquetes and the Unraveling of the Myth of Louis XIV The Art Bulletin 76 1 1 Taylor amp Francis 152 doi 10 2307 3046007 JSTOR 3046007 Summerson 1963 plates 14 and 47 Neumann 2013 p 297 Wischermann 1997 p 35 Berger 1994 pp 28 29 Berger 1993 p 20 Berger 1994 p 20 Berger 1994 pp 20 28 29 Berger 1994 p 33 The drawing is undated It is reproduced by Blunt 1953 plate 155a Laprade 1960 Plate VI 2b asserts Francois d Orbay is the author Tadgell 1980 fig 66 Perouse de Montclos 1989 fig 288 Berger 1993 fig 24 Berger 1994 fig 18 Gargiani 1998 fig 166 Blunt amp Beresford 1999 fig 270 and Petzet 2000 fig 62 The following support a 1662 1664 date Blunt 1953 Laprade 1960 Perouse de Montclos 1989 Berger 1993 and 1994 Feldmann 1996 Petzet 2000 and Neumann 2013 although two Blunt and Petzet emphasize the evidence is circumstantial and uncertain Petzet also gives 1667 or 1668 as an alternative Tadgell dates the drawing to 1667 or 1668 He is supported by Gargiani and partly by Beresford who gives c 1668 Cojannot 2003 p 237 supports the later date in a review of Gargiani s book Neumann 2013 p 296 Blunt 1999 p 221 Berger 1993 pp 25 26 Neumann 2013 pp 296 297 Summerson 1963 plate 47 Wischermann 1997 p 35 and Bottineau Fuchs 1996 p 162 Sutcliffe 1993 p 31 credits Perrault alone a b Berger 1993 p 26 Petzet 2000 p 561 reproduces the Registre in the original French The quote in French is ils travaillassant unanimement amp conjointement a tous les dessein qu il y auroit a faire pour l achevement du Palais du Louvre en sorte que ses desseins seroient regardes comme l ouvrage d eux trois egalement amp que pour conserver l union et bonne intelligence aucun ne pourroit s en dire l auteur particulierement au prejudice des autres Berger 1993 p 26 Berger s translation with the bracketed explanatory material added by him a b c Berger 1993 p 27 Burchard 2016 p 57 Burchard writes one can assume that Le Brun would have used this medium to his advantage Bottineau Fuchs 1996 p 162 Berger 1993 p 48 Neumann 2013 p 297 Berger 1994 pp 34 35 Berger 1994 p 35 Berger 1993 p 35 Berger 1994 p 35 Ayers 2003 pp 31 and 36 a b Christiane Aulanier 1961 Le Musee Charles X et le Departement des Antiquites Egyptiennes PDF Paris Editions des Musees Nationaux p 18 Berger 1993 p 63 Berger cites Whiteley amp Braham 1969 and Bazin 1981 Ayers 2003 p 37 William Thornton 1759 1828 Library of Congress Retrieved July 7 2007 Bibliography edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to East facade of the Sully Wing Louvre Ayers Andrew 2004 The Architecture of Paris Stuttgart London Edition Axel Menges ISBN 9783930698967 Bazin Germain 1981 L erreur du fosse du Louvre Le Monde 20 August 1981 p 2 Berger Robert W 1993 The Palace of the Sun The Louvre of Louis XIV University Park The Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 9780271008479 Berger Robert W 1994 A Royal Passion Louis XIV as Patron of Architecture Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521440297 Blunt Anthony 1953 Art and Architecture in France 1500 to 1700 Harmondsworth Middlesex Penguin Books OCLC 1019966574 Blunt Anthony 1999 Art and Architecture in France 1500 1700 fifth edition revised by Richard Beresford New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300077353 ISBN 9780300077483 paperback Bottineau Fuchs Yves 1996 Paris V Buildings 6 Palais du Louvre ii Post medieval vol 24 pp 161 163 in The Dictionary of Art edited by Jane Turner reprinted with minor corrections in 1998 New York Grove ISBN 9781884446009 Burchard Wolf 2016 The Sovereign Artist Charles Le Brun and the Image of Louis XIV London Paul Holbertonn Publishing ISBN 9781911300052 Cojannot Alexandre 2003 Claude Perrault et le Louvre de Louis XIV A propos de deux livres recents Bulletin Monumental vol 161 no 3 pp 231 239 Feldmann Dietrich 1996 Le Vau 2 Francois Le Vau vol 19 pp 267 268 in The Dictionary of Art 34 volumes edited by Jane Turner New York Grove ISBN 9781884446009 Gargiani Roberto 1998 Idea e costruzione del Louvre Parigi cruciale nella storia dell architettura moderna europea Florence Alinea ISBN 8881252538 Laprade Albert 1960 Francois d Orbay Architecte de Louis XIV Paris Editions Vincent Freal OCLC 562063179 780531730 1096782 Neuman Robert 2013 Baroque and Rococo Art and Architecture Boston Pearson ISBN 9780205832262 Perouse de Montclos Jean Marie 1989 Histoire de l architecture francaise De la Renaissance a la Revolution Paris Menges ISBN 2856203000 Petzet Michael 2000 Claude Perrault und die Architektur des Sonnenkonigs Der Louvre Konig Ludwigs XIV und das Werk Claude Perraults Munich Berlin Deutscher Kunstverlag ISBN 3422062645 Summerson John 1963 The Classical Language of Architecture Cambridge Massachusetts The MIT Press ISBN 9780262690126 Sutcliffe Anthony 1993 Paris An Architectural History New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 0300054459 Tadgell Christopher 1980 Claude Perrault Francois Le Vau and the Louvre Colonnade The Burlington Magazine vol 122 no 926 May 1980 pp 326 337 Whiteley Mary Braham Allan 1969 Les soubassements de l aile orientale du Louvre Revue de l art vol 1 no 4 pp 30 43 Wischermann Heinfried 1997 Paris An Architectural Guide Venice Arsenale Editrice ISBN 8877431628 48 51 36 59 N 2 20 22 71 E 48 8601639 N 2 3396417 E 48 8601639 2 3396417 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louvre Colonnade amp oldid 1181677270, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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