BOULLÉE, Étienne-Louis - b. 1728 Paris, d. 1799 Paris - WGA

BOULLÉE, Étienne-Louis

(b. 1728 Paris, d. 1799 Paris)

French visionary architect, theorist, and teacher. Boullée wanted originally to be a painter, but, following the wishes of his father, he turned to architecture. He studied with Jacques-François Blondel and Germain Boffrand and with Jean-Laurent Legeay and had opened his own studio by the age of 19. He designed several Parisian city mansions in the 1760s and ‘70s, notably the Hôtel de Brunoy (1774-79). Despite the innovative Neoclassicism of his executed works, Boullée achieved a truly lasting influence as a teacher and theorist. Through his atelier passed such masters as Alexandre-Théodore Brongniart, Jean-François-Thèrese Chalgrin, Jean-Nicolas-Louis Durand (1760-1834), and Louis-Michel Thibault (1750-1815). In all, he taught for more than 50 years.

In his important theoretical designs for public monuments, Boullée sought to inspire lofty sentiments in the viewer by architectural forms suggesting the sublimity, immensity, and awesomeness of the natural world, as well as the divine intelligence underlying its creation. At the same time, he was strongly influenced by the indiscriminate enthusiasm for antiquity, and especially Egyptian monuments, felt by his contemporaries.

The distinguishing aspect of Boullée’s mature work is his abstraction of the geometric forms suggested by ancient works into a new concept of monumental building that would possess the calm, ideal beauty of classical architecture while also having considerable expressive power. In his famous essay La Théorie des corps, Boullée investigated the properties of geometric forms and their effect on the senses, attributing “innate” symbolic qualities to the cube, pyramid, cylinder, and sphere, the last regarded as an ideal form. In a series of projects for public monuments, culminating in the design (1784) for an immense sphere that would serve as a cenotaph honouring the British physicist Isaac Newton, Boullée gave imaginary form to his theories. The interior of the cenotaph was to be a hollow globe representing the universe.

To bring geometric forms to life, Boullée depended on striking and original effects of light and shadow. He also emphasized the potential for mystery in building, often burying part of a structure. This “poetic” approach to architecture, in some ways prefiguring the 19th-century Romantic movement, may also be seen in Boullée’s extensive use of symbolism. For example, his Palais Municipal rests on four pedestal-like guardhouses, demonstrating that society is supported by law.

Boullée’s emphasis on the psychology of the viewer is a principal theme of his Architecture, essai sur l’art, not published until the 20th century. He has been criticized as a megalomaniac, because of his tendency toward grandiose proposals, but these should be regarded simply as visionary schemes rather than as practical projects. In his desire to create a unique, original architecture appropriate to an ideal new social order, Boullée anticipated similar concerns in 20th-century architecture.

Cenotaph for Isaac Newton
Cenotaph for Isaac Newton by

Cenotaph for Isaac Newton

Boull�e’s most famous project is the cenotaph for the physicist Isaac Newton. It indicates on one hand the increasing respect shown to civilian “intellectual heroes” since the Enlightenment, and on the other constitutes a very clear example of the explicitly commemorative character of Revolutionary architecture. The global figure of the cenotaph describes the sphere of the universe. In the interior the vaulting is perforated into a giant starry sky. Beneath the immensity of this “vault of heaven rises the sarcophagus of Newton on a stepped plinth.

The drawing shows a daytime view with nocturnal light inside.

Cenotaph for Isaac Newton
Cenotaph for Isaac Newton by

Cenotaph for Isaac Newton

Boull�e’s most famous project is the cenotaph for the physicist Isaac Newton. It indicates on one hand the increasing respect shown to civilian “intellectual heroes” since the Enlightenment, and on the other constitutes a very clear example of the explicitly commemorative character of Revolutionary architecture. The global figure of the cenotaph describes the sphere of the universe. In the interior the vaulting is perforated into a giant starry sky. Beneath the immensity of this “vault of heaven rises the sarcophagus of Newton on a stepped plinth.

The drawing shows a night view.

Plan for a Métropole
Plan for a Métropole by

Plan for a Métropole

The project for a ‘m�tropole’ was included in Boull�e’s unpublished ‘Essai sur l’Art.’ The massive dome on the cruciform building with an encircling colonnade is derived both from Soufflot’s Sainte-Genevi�ve and Bramante’s project for St. Peter’s in Rome. However, the scale underwent a considerable enlargement here. He presented interior views, with the rows of columns and massive barrel vault, shoving both day and night aspects, that is the different effects of sunlight streaming in and a ghostly artificial lighting.

The drawing shows the daytime view of the exterior with sunlight.

Plan for a Métropole
Plan for a Métropole by

Plan for a Métropole

The project for a ‘m�tropole’ was included in Boull�e’s unpublished ‘Essai sur l’Art.’ The massive dome on the cruciform building with an encircling colonnade is derived both from Soufflot’s Sainte-Genevi�ve and Bramante’s project for St. Peter’s in Rome. However, the scale underwent a considerable enlargement here. He presented interior views, with the rows of columns and massive barrel vault, shoving both day and night aspects, that is the different effects of sunlight streaming in and a ghostly artificial lighting.

The drawing shows the daytime view of the interior with sunlight.

Plan for a national library
Plan for a national library by

Plan for a national library

A huge coffered barrel vault linking colonnades receding into the depths distinguishes Boull�e’s project for the huge reading room of a projected National Library. A novel and influential motif is the opening of the vault in an elongated top-light.

The drawing shows the interior view.

Plan for rebuilding the Palace of Versailles
Plan for rebuilding the Palace of Versailles by

Plan for rebuilding the Palace of Versailles

Along with Claude-Nicolas Ledoux, the most important representative of Revolutionary architecture was �tienne-Louis Boull�e, who, after initial successes in the private sector, increasingly relied on his work as a teacher and graphic artist. A project for the reshaping of the palace of Versailles, developed in 1780 within the framework of a competition, already shows characteristic features of his architectural approach. The complex hierarchy and carefully differentiated orchestration of fa�ades, with vertical accents in line with Baroque principles of subordination, are reduced in Boull�e to a few huge masses in which horizontals dominate.

Proposal for a Museum: Interior view
Proposal for a Museum: Interior view by

Proposal for a Museum: Interior view

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