ANGE-JACQUES GABRIEL

Ange Jacques Gabriel by Jean-Baptiste Greuze

'Ange-Jacques Gabriel' (October 23, 1698January 4, 1782) was the most prominent French architect of his generation.
Born to a Parisian family of architects and initially trained by the royal architect Robert de Cotte and his father (who died in 1742), whom he assisted in the creation of the Place Royale (now Place de la Bourse) at Bordeaux (completed in 1735), the younger Gabriel was made a member of the Académie royale d'architecture in 1728. He was the principal assistant to his father as ''Premier Architecte'' at Versailles from 1735 and succeeded him in the position in 1742, essentially making him the premier architect of France, a role he retained for most of the reign of Louis XV.
Château of the Petit Trianon in the park at Versailles

Gabriel's symmetrical palace-like façades for the ''hôtels particuliers'' that enclose the north side of the Place Louis XV (Place de la Concorde), Paris, were begun in 1754 and completed in 1763. That on the right housed the storerooms for the royal furnishings (''mobilier de la couronne''), with luxurious apartments for the ''intendant''; it has housed the naval ministry since the court returned from Versailles in 1789.
Gabriel's sober rationality in planning and detail promoted the transition from Rococo to Neoclassicism. For forty years, Gabriel supplied all designs not only for exterior construction (the
"Gabriel Wing" at Versailles was named for him in modern times) and also for the constant remodelling of interiors at Versailles. His Petit Trianon at Versailles (''illustration'', right) is one of the gems of French Classicism.
Gabriel died in Paris in 1782.
Pavillon Butard


Contents
Major works
External link

Major works



★ Extension and transformations at the Château de Choisy, 1740-1777

Château de Compiègne, 1750 onwards

★ The Pavillon du Butard, 1750 at La Celle-Saint-Cloud.

★ Place de la Bourse, Bordeaux, 1755 (as ''Place Royale''

★ Extension of the Château de Menars (Loir-et-Cher), 1760-1764, for Madame de Pompadour

Petit Trianon, at Versailles, 1762 to 1768

★ L'École Militaire on the Champ de Mars, Paris

★ Royal Opera, at Versailles, 1769-70

Place de la Concorde (as ''Place Louis XV''), 1772

★ Hôtel de la Marine, Place de la Concorde, 1775

External link



Petit Trianon

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves