Charles Mewès

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Charles Frédéric Mewès
Vaterland
Ocean liner RMS Aquitania

Charles-Frédéric Mewès (30 January 1858 – 9 August 1914)[1] was a French architect and designer.

Biography

Born in

Modern style for an elegant, meticulous recall of eighteenth-century France: the logical, spatial symmetry of Louis XVI style
recurs continuously.

Mewès's hotels, steamer interiors, clubs, and private residences suited the

Ritz Hotel in London (1905-1906), and the Hotel Ritz in Madrid (1908-1910); he was also the designer behind Hotel María Cristina [es] hotel in San Sebastián (completed in 1912). The London Ritz was one of Britain's earliest steel-framed buildings. Subsequently, he undertook the design of Pall Mall's largest club, the Royal Automobile Club (1910) which featured a "Pompeiian" swimming bath adapted from the earlier l'Etablissement Hydrominéral (1899-1900) at Contréxeville. His first maritime interior, the Hamburg America Line's SS Amerika was completed in 1905; the company so admired it that Mewès became their resident designer. On three German ships he incorporated a Pompeiian pool, although not on his last vessel, Cunard's Aquitania
(1914).

Although Mewès only spoke French, he opened firms in both London and Cologne, Germany, with Arthur Joseph Davis, who had been his classmate at the École des Beaux-Arts, and with the Swiss Alphonse Bischoff.[3]

A brilliant and cultured man, Charles Mewès owned an extensive library, especially in the design field. In October 1947 the journal of the Royal Institute of British Architects described him as "The true type of the French intellectual of good stock". He designed many admired buildings, including the colossal Château Porgès de Rochefort-en-Yvelines [fr], the Jules Ferry residence and his own residence at 36 Boulevard des Invalides in Paris. He himself became a teacher and taught many students from all over the world.

Charles Mewès bought the small castle of Scharrachbergheim in Alsace, where he spent much time with his three children after the death of his wife in 1896. He died in Paris in 1914.

Selected works

Hotels

Private residences

Other buildings

Ships

  • Ocean liner SS Amerika (1905–1906), interiors: first Ritz restaurant at sea.
  • Ocean liner SS Imperator (1913), interiors: remarkable for the use of marble in abundance, particularly for the swimming pool and for the first class dining room.
  • Ocean liner SS
    Vaterland
    (1914), interiors: in this ship Mewès was the first to divide the shafts of the funnels to provide a complete vista of the central public rooms from one end of the ship to the other.
  • Ocean liner RMS Aquitania (1914), interiors.
  • Ocean liner SS
    Kaiserin Auguste Victoria
    .

References

  1. ^ AGORHA : Bases de données de l'Institut national d'histoire de l'art (INHA). 25 February 2022.
  2. ^ Binney 2006, p. 21.
  3. .
  4. ^ Historic England. "16 Charles Street (1217940)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 18 January 2022.