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Charles Percier

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Charles Percier. Portrait by
Robert Lefèvre (1807)

Charles Percier ([ʃaʁl pɛʁsje]; 22 August 1764 – 5 September 1838) was a neoclassical French architect, interior decorator and designer, who worked in a close partnership with Pierre François Léonard Fontaine, originally his friend from student days. For work undertaken from 1794 onward, trying to ascribe conceptions or details to one or other of them is fruitless; it is impossible to disentangle their cooperative efforts in this fashion. Together, Percier and Fontaine were inventors and major proponents of the rich, grand, consciously-archaeological versions of neoclassicism we recognise as Directoire style and Empire style.

Following Charles Percier's death in 1838, Fontaine designed a tomb in their characteristic style in the Pere Lachaise Cemetery. Percier and Fontaine had lived together as well as being colleagues. Fontaine married late in life and after his death in 1853 his body was placed in the same tomb according to his wishes.

Biography

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View of a Roman House (watercolor)

Percier was born into a poor Parisian family in 1764. His mother was a laundry woman for Marie-Antoinette and his father was a porter at one of the gates of the Palace of Tuileries, who was later promoted into a post in the interior of the palace.[1] This afforded the young Charles Portier an opportunity to observe first hand the lifestyles of the wealthy nobility in a palace that he would, years later, play a major role in rejuvenating.

From the age of 12 onward, Percier attended a free school for teaching drawing, an establishment whose role was to provide access into the art world for poor students. Percier's talent was quickly recognised.[1] After passing a short time in the studio of a painter named Lagrenée, a place was found for him in the studio of the architect, Antoine-François Peyre. It was there that he met Pierre Fontaine, with whom he would form a life-long and very successful partnership. Starting in 1794, Fontaine and Percier worked so closely together that it is difficult to distinguish their work.[2]

Percier won the second prix de Rome in 1783, and, in 1784, at the age of twenty years, he won the grand prix de Rome (with a pension), which paid for his stay in Rome[3]. Fontaine had won the second prix de Rome a year earlier and was already in Rome.[2]

One early product of their collaboration was Palais, maisons et autres édifices modernes dessinés à Rome ("A palace, houses and other modern buildings designed in Rome"), which attracted the attention of prospective clients when they returned to Paris. At the end of 1792, near the end of the first phase of the French Revolution, Percier was appointed to supervise the scenery at the Paris Opéra, a post at the center of innovative design. Fontaine returned from the security of London and they continued at the Opéra together until 1796. Charles-Louis Bernier [fr] was a third member of their team. Their initial successes in interior decoration came while serving wealthy, private clients: "The first clients of Percier and Fontaine were the financiers Ouvrard, Chauvelin and Gaudin, who had their recently acquired hotels in the Chaussée d'Antin district fitted out and decorated."[4] It was through these private clients that they first came to the attention of Joséphine de Beauharnais and Napoleon Bonaparte.[5]

Bonaparte liked their work and gave them the responsibility for the some of the most prestigious projects of the Consulate and the Empire: the creation of the Rue de Rivoli and the development of the Louvre Palace.[5] He appointed them as his personal architects and never wavered in his decision; they were worked on imperial projects throughout Napoleon's time in power. The relationship only dissolved when Napoleon abdicated and was exiled to Elba. After the restoration of the House of Bourbon in 1814, they found themselves associated too intimately with the Empire ever to earn an official commission again. From that time forward, Percier conducted a student atelier, a teaching studio or workshop. One of Percier's pupils, Auguste de Montferrand, designed Saint Isaac's Cathedral in St Petersburg for Tsar Alexander I.

They worked for ten years (1802–1812) on the Louvre. The old palace had not been a royal residence for generations, so it was free of any taint associated with the detested Bourbons. It stood in the heart of Paris, so that the vain Emperor could be seen coming and going, unlike Versailles, which had been rendered uninhabitable through destruction and looting.

Arc du Carrousel

They worked on the Tuileries Palace that faced the Louvre across the Place du Carrousel and the parterres. In that prominent square, Percier and Fontaine designed the Arc du Carrousel (1807–1808), commemorating the Battle of Austerlitz.

They also worked at Josephine's Château de Malmaison, at the Château de Montgobert for Pauline Bonaparte, and did alterations and decorations for former Bourbon palaces or castles at Compiègne, Saint-Cloud, and Fontainebleau.[5]

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 special occasions, Percier was called upon to design for the Sèvres porcelain manufactory: in 1814 Percier's published designs were adapted by Alexandre Brogniart, director of Sèvres, a grand classicising vase 137 cm tall, that came to be known as the "Londonderry Vase" when Louis XVIII gave it to the Marquess of Londonderry just before the Congress of Vienna.[6]

Percier and Fontaine published several later books, notably Recueil de décoration intérieure concernant tout ce qui rapporte à l'ameublement ("Collection of interior designs: Everything that relates to furniture", 1812) with its engravings in a spare outline technique. These engravings spread their style beyond the Empire; they helped put a French stamp on the English Regency style and influenced the Dutch-British connoisseur-designer, Thomas Hope.

Students

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At the end of 1814, Charles Percier officially retired and devoted himself to teaching. The following are some of his students:

References

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  1. ^ a b "Vie de Charles Percier (1764-1838)". Institut de France (in French). Retrieved 6 August 2024.
  2. ^ a b "The Style of "The Empire"". The Art Amateur. 5 (1): 11–11. 1881. ISSN 2151-8246.
  3. ^ Raoul-Rochette (1840). "Percier. Sa vie et ses ouvrages". période initiale: 246–268.
  4. ^ Lafont, Anne (2005). "À La Recherche D'une Iconographie « Incroyable » Et « Merveilleuse »: Les Panneaux Décoratifs Sous Le Directoire". Annales historiques de la Révolution française (340): 5–21. ISSN 0003-4436.
  5. ^ a b c "Les architectes : Percier et Fontaine". Passerelles (in French). Retrieved 6 August 2024.
  6. ^ The vase, now at the Art Institute of Chicago, is discussed by Lynn Springer Roberts, "The Londonderry Vase: A Royal Gift to Curry Favor", Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies 15.1 (1989:68–81+88)
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