Jules Hardouin-Mansart

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Portrait of Jules Hardoun Mansart by Hyacinthe Rigaud, with Les Invalides in background

Jules Hardouin-Mansart (French pronunciation:

Louis XIV of France.[1]

Biography

Born Jules Hardouin in Paris in 1646, he studied under his renowned great-uncle

Madame de Montespan. He quickly showed he was a master of bureaucratic diplomacy as well as design and construction; he gained the protection and support of Madame de Montespan, then François-Michel le Tellier, Marquis de Louvois, the Minister of War. He studied under and then collaborated with landscape designer André Le Nôtre, before finally working directly with the King himself.[2]

In 1677, he began working on the expansion of the royal Palace of Versailles, a project which occupied him for the rest of his life. Soon afterward became a member of the Académie royale d'architecture. In 1678, he became director of the work at Versailles. [1] and the most prominent architect in the royal entourage. He was named First Architect of the King in 1681 and was raised to the nobility in 1682. He became intendant of the King in 1685, and royal inspector-general of buildings 1691, under the elderly superintendent of buildings, Villacerf, whom he finally replaced in 1699.

He owed his rise not just for his ability to please his patron with his designs, but especially because of his ability to manage enormous and complex projects with many elements and designers. He would sketch out an idea; stand back and intervene and adjust when needed, from time to time to visit the site, and to see that the budget was kept under control. [2]

In the latter part of his career he left more of the details to the architects who worked under him, notably Robert de Cotte, who was his chosen successor. He was given the title of Count of Sagonne in 1702, but died six months later at the royal Château de Marly.[2]

Style

Hardouin-Mansart was the leading master of the architectural style that became known as the

French classicism
. A particular skill of Hardouin was his ability to create a wide variety of structures; chateaux, churches, pavilions, private residences, parks, and urban squares. He demonstrated an ability to adapt, modify, enlarge and rehabilitate, without losing the character of the original building, but adding his own original variations on the theme, as he demonstrated in particular at the Palace of Versailles.

Much of his success was due to his ability to select and guide very talented collaborators. his collaborators included the interior designer Charles Le Brun, who designed many of the interiors of Versailles, in perfect harmony with his architecture, and Robert de Cotte, a designer who also became his brother-in-law and in 1708 became his successor, completing the major projects he had begun in the Palace of Versailles.[3]

His architecture is especially characterized by simplification; by large smooth spaces, the repetition of forms (especially arcades with semicircular arches and detached columns; long horizontals, and detached open spaces. He often used long rows of columns in front of a façade to give an air of grandeur and to hide the irregularities of the structure. He used the architectural orders to give a special majesty to interior surfaces, particularly in the chapel of Versailles, and the interiors of the Palace of Versailles and the Grand Trianon. [4]

He was adept at creating a sense of awe, as he demonstrated especially in the dome of Les Invalides and in the garden façade of the Palace of Versailles, and in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles.[4]

Major works

Les Invalides

  • Church of the Hôtel des Invalides in Paris (1676–1691)
    Church of the
    Hôtel des Invalides
    in Paris (1676–1691)
  • The outer dome conceals an inner dome, visible from below
    The outer dome conceals an inner dome, visible from below
  • Inner dome of Les Invalides, seen from below
    Inner dome of Les Invalides, seen from below
  • Hardouin-Mansard's plan for a curving colonnade of Les Invalides, not completed (1700)
    Hardouin-Mansard's plan for a curving colonnade of Les Invalides, not completed (1700)

On March 1, 1676, François-Michel le Tellier, Marquis de Louvois, the Minister of War, summoned Hardouin-Mansart to take over construction of Les Invalides, the enormous hospital and chapel the King was building in the center of Paris for his pensioned and wounded soldiers. The project had been begun in 1671 by Libéral Bruant, and some of the residential buildings were completed and already occupied, but the centerpiece, the chapel for the soldiers, had not been begun. The King was not satisfied with the plans that were offered to him by Bruant, and complained about the slowness of the work. On March 1, 1676, Louvois dismissed Bruant and summoned Hardouin-Mansart, who was little known outside the royal household, and asked him to take over the church. [5]

The chapel originally planned by Bruant for the veterans was relatively modest in size and decoration. Hardouin-Mansart proposed a much more grandiose project with two adjoining parts; a choir for the pensioners, and a majestic domed royal church for the King. This was beyond what the Minister had proposed, but it apparently pleased the King, and, after long discussion, Hardouin-Mansart was given the project not only for the church, but for the Hôtel as well. Hardouin-Mansart briskly organized and completed the construction of residences and infirmaries for the pensioners. In 1676 he began work on the choir, the portion of the church intended for the pensioners. By the summer of 1677 the roof was in place, and in April 1678 he was able to order the woodwork of the stalls, and in 1679, the cabinetry for the organ. [6]

The work on the royal chapel proceeded more slowly. Its distinctive feature was the dome, one of the earliest constructed in Paris, following the church of the Val-de-Grâce, designed by his great-uncle, François Mansart and Jacques Lemercier (1645–1667), and the Collège des Quatre-Nations (1662–1670). His original plan called for a single great space under the dome, and painted decoration on the interior of the dome. However, while the work was in progress, the French army suffered reverses in the Netherlands, and the Superintendent of Finances, Colbert, was slow in providing funding. Hardouin-Mansart had to modify the original plan, eliminating the painted ceiling, and redesigning the dome with an interior dome, not visible from the outside. He mounted the dome on two successive drums, giving it greater height than the earlier Paris domes. He commissioned the sculptor François Girardon to make statues illustrating the themes of the building, the virtues of the Saints and the French Kings. By 1690 a large group of sculptors was at work at statues for the niches of the façade. The war was followed by a financial crisis; work was halted entirely in 1695, and did not resume until the war ended in 1699. Once the war ended, constructed resumed, and the royal chapel was finally consecrated, in the presence of the King, on 22 August 1706, not long before the death of Hardouin-Mansart. It remains his most famous work. [7]

The Palace of Versailles

From 1677 until his death, Hardouin-Mansart was responsible for the design and construction of much of the Palace of Versailles of Louis XIV. He succeeded the royal architect Louis Le Vau and became the surintendant des Bâtiments du Roi (Superintendent of royal buildings). Beginning in 1678, he completed the "envelope" of new buildings surrounding the original Château by Louis XIII, which had been begun by his predecessor, Louis Le Vau. He transformed the first-floor terrace of the Palace overlooking the garden, into the celebrated Hall of Mirrors, richly decorated by his collaborator, the artist Charles Le Brun. He also reconstructed the façade of the first floor facing the marble courtyard, giving it large arched windows and bringing in more light, and added new central residential wing, also with larger windows, for the royal family. To house the growing number of staff and servants in the Château, he built the Grand Commun (1682–85), and for the horses and carriages of the royal household constructed two palatial stables on the city-side of the Palace (finished in 1682).[8]

His later additions to the Palace included the

Orangerie (1684–86), halfway underground at the end of south wing, accessed by two monumental stairways and opening onto its own sunken garden. Toward the end of his life he built a separate smaller one-story palace, the Grand Trianon (1687) as a refuge for the King from the noise and ceremony of the court. His final project at Versilles was the chapel (1699–1710), which was carefully integrated into the architecture of the south wing. [9]

Royal Squares

Hardouin-Mansard was also an important urban designer, the creator of two notable Paris residential squares. Both squares, the

monument to Louis XIV, surrounded by a circle of harmonious matching residential buildings. The original statue was melted down after the Revolution, and replaced later by a copy; while the square was much altered in later years, with the addition of traverse streets and buildings in a different style. [10]

The later Place Vendôme was a larger square, but Hardouin-Mansard broke the rigid box shape with corner buildings facing inward, decorated with ornamental pediments. [10]

Châteaux

  • Elevation of the central pavilion of the Château de Clagny, built for Madame de Montespan (1674–1680)]
    Elevation of the central pavilion of the
    Madame de Montespan
    (1674–1680)]
  • Château de Dampierre
  • Château de Marly
  • Pavillon Mansart in Vanves
    Pavillon Mansart in Vanves
  • Chateau du Val in Saint Germain en Laye, a former hunting lodge which has since been remodeled (1674)
    Chateau du Val in Saint Germain en Laye, a former hunting lodge which has since been remodeled (1674)
  • Chateau of Meudon (1705), burned in 1871 and transformed into an observatory after 1877
    Chateau of Meudon
    (1705), burned in 1871 and transformed into an observatory after 1877

His most prominent position in France put him in place to create many of the significant monuments of the period, and to set the tone for the restrained French Late Baroque architectural style, somewhat chastened by academic detailing, that was influential as far as Saint Petersburg and even echoed in Constantinople. At the same time, the size of support staff in his official bureaucratic position has often raised criticisms that he was less than directly responsible for the work that was constructed under his name, criticisms that underestimate the discipline control within a large, classically trained studio.

Hardouin-Mansart used the

Het Loo (Netherlands), for William III of Orange
.

He died at Marly-le-Roi in 1708.

Gallery

List and dates of notable works

Notes and citations

  1. ^ a b Garms 1999, p. 301-302.
  2. ^ a b c Garms 1999, p. 302.
  3. ^ Poisson 2009, p. 105.
  4. ^ a b Garms 1999, pp. 304–305.
  5. ^ Jestaz 1990, p. 34.
  6. ^ Jestaz 1990, p. 38-39.
  7. ^ Jestaz 1990, p. 48.
  8. ^ Poisson 2009, p. 192.
  9. ^ Poisson 2009, pp. 190–192.
  10. ^ a b Poisson 2009, p. 187.

Bibliography

  • Ducher, Robert (1998). Caractéristique des Styles. Flammarion. .
  • Garms, Jörg (1999). Article on Jules Harouin-Mansart in Dictionnaire des Architects (in French). Encyclopedia Universalis. .
  • Jestaz, Bertrand (1990). L'Hôtel et l'église des Invalides (in French). Picard and Caisse Nationale des Monuments Historiques et des Sites. .
  • Lacaille, Frédéric (2012). Versailles – 400 ans d'histoire. Paris: Gallimard. .
  • Poisson, Michel (2009). 1000 Immeubles et Monuments de Paris (in French). Paris: Parigramme. .

See also

External links