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Charles Percier

 
Art Encyclopedia: Charles Percier-Bassant

(b Paris, 22 Aug 1764; d Paris, 5 Sept 1838). French architect, draughtsman and drawing-master. With PIERRE-FRAN?OIS-L?ONARD FONTAINE he formed a lifelong friendship and a close working collaboration to design theatre scenery, architecture and interior decoration. At the end of 1792 Percier invited Fontaine, then in exile in London, to share his new appointment as supervisor of the scenery at the Op?ra in Paris; they remained in this post until 1796. It is difficult to define exactly the separate contributions of Percier, Fontaine and Claude-Louis Bernier (1755-1830) in their work together. Each made a considerable contribution to the foundation and subsequent direction of the EMPIRE STYLE. From the first half of the 18th century the Comte de Caylus had instigated a passion for antiquity with the publication of his works on the Classical monuments of Greece, Italy and Egypt. It was Percier and Fontaine who interpreted this classicism by creating in the Empire style a synthesis of its grandeur and grace and directing the style towards good taste and reason.

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Architecture and Landscaping: Charles Percier
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-Charles Bassant
(1764–1838)

French Neo-Classical architect who studied with A.-F. Peyre and in Rome before establishing an architectural practice with Fontaine in Paris in 1794. As Percier & Fontaine the firm became the leading architects of the Napoleonic period, and was largely responsible for the creation of the Empire style, the epitome of which was at Malmaison, with its celebrated tent-room and other ravishing interiors (1799–1803). In 1801 the two men were appointed Architects to the Government, designed the interiors of the Tuileries and St-Cloud Palaces, and extended the Louvre, Paris. They also laid out the Rue de Rivoli, Paris, with its arcaded ground-floors, and carried out extensive works at Fontainebleau, Compiègne, and Versailles. Their Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel (1806–8) shows their mastery of Roman Antique Classicism and refinement of detail. Their Palais, maisons, et autres édifices modernes dessinés à Rome (Palaces, Houses, and Other Modern Buildings Designed in Rome—1798) and Receuil de décorations intérieures, comprenant tout ce qui a rapport à l'ameublement (Compendium of Interior Decorations, Comprising all that Relates to Furnishing—1801) were influential throughout Europe and America, and ensured the Empire style was widely disseminated.

Bibliography

  • Biver (1963, 1964)
  • Duportal (1931)
  • Jervis (1994)
  • Middleton & Watkin (1987)
  • Jane Turner (1996)
  • D.Watkin (1986)

The full bibliography for this book is available to download as a pdf file.
Download the bibliography for A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (PDF: 1.2MB)

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Charles Percier
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Percier, Charles (shärl pĕrsyā'), 1764-1838, French architect. He won (1786) the Grand Prix de Rome, and in 1794 he became associated with Pierre François Léonard Fontaine. Napoleon appointed them as government architects, and this post lasted until the emperor's fall. In the development of the Empire style under Napoleon's official sponsorship, Percier and Fontaine became its official interpreters, not only for Paris but also in Antwerp, Brussels, and Rome, where they designed many residences. They worked (1802-12) on the palaces of the Louvre and the Tuileries, designed the Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel, and did alterations and decorations for the imperial châteaux of Versailles, Malmaison, Compiègne, and Saint-Cloud. As interior decorators they designed every detail of furniture, fabric, hardware, and wallpaper in conformity with Empire motives. The partnership dissolved in 1814, and Percier thereafter conducted a student atelier. With Fontaine he published several books on architecture in Rome and interior decoration.
Wikipedia: Charles Percier
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Charles Percier.

Charles Percier (22 August 17645 September 1838) was a neoclassical French architect, interior decorator and designer, who worked in such close partnership with Pierre François Léonard Fontaine, originally his friend from student days. From 1794 onwards it is often fruitless to disentangle artistic responsibilities in their work. Together, Percier and Fontaine were inventors and major proponents of the rich and grand, consciously archaeological versions of neoclassicism we recognise as Directoire style and Empire style.

Biography

Percier was born at Paris.

In 1784 he won the Prix de Rome, a government fellowship for study in Rome, where he met Fontaine. One early product of their collaboarion was Palais, maisons et autres édifices modernes dessinés à Rome which attracted the attention of prospective clients when they returned to Paris. At the end of 1792, in the first phase of the French Revolution Percier was appointed to supervise the scenery at the Paris Opéra, a post that was at the center of innovative design. Fontaine returned from the security of London, where he had been exiled and they continued at the Opéra until 1796. Claude-Louis Bernier (1755 – 1830) was a third member of the team.

The calculated theater of Empire style, its aggressive opulence restrained by a slightly dry and correct sense of the Antique Taste, and its neo-Roman values that were both imperial and not connected to the ancien régime commended the style to Napoleon Bonaparte. He appointed them his personal architects and never wavered in his decision; they were at work on Imperial projects almost the very end. The partnership dissolved as Napoleon retired to Elba. They were too associated with the Empire ever to have an official commission under the Restauration. Percier thereafter conducted a student atelier. One of Percier's pupils, Auguste de Montferrand, designed Saint Isaac's Cathedral in St Petersburg for Tsar Alexander I.

They worked (1802–12) on the palace of the Louvre, which had not been a royal residence for generations and thus was free of recent Bourbon associations, and while stood in the heart of Paris, so that the Emperor could be seen coming and going, unlike Versailles, which had been rendered uninhabitable, not by chance, stripping of every furnishing in the series of sales during the Revolution that went on day after day for many months. No monarch would ever live there again.

They worked on the Tuileries Palace that faced the Louvre across squares and parterres.

In the extension of what is now the Axe historique of Paris, Percier and Fontaine designed the Arc du Carrousel (1807–8), commemorating Austerlitz,

They also worked at Josephine's Château de Malmaison and at the Château de Montgobert (circa 1798) for Pauline Bonaparte, and did alterations and decorations for former Bourbon Compiègne and Saint-Cloud and at Fontainebleau, another royal palace without recent ghosts.

Percier and Fontaine designed every detail in their interiors: state beds, sculptural side tables and other furniture, wall lights and candlesticks, chandeliers, door hardware, textiles and wallpaper. On a special occasion, Percier might be called upon to design for the Sèvres porcelain manufactory; in one case a grand vase in the Greek taste, the "Londonderry Vase" (Art Institute of Chicago), was just finished in 1814; Louis XVIII quickly gave to the Marquess of Londonderry during the Congress of Vienna. They published several later books, especially Recueil de décoration intérieure concernant tout ce qui rapporte à l'ameublement (1812) with its engravings in a spare outline technique, engravings that spread their style beyond the Empire and were influential in putting a French stamp on the English Regency style and influenced the connoisseur-designer Henry Hope.

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Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Architecture and Landscaping. A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. Copyright © 1999, 2006 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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