PERCIER, Charles - b. 1764 Paris, d. 1838 Paris - WGA

PERCIER, Charles

(b. 1764 Paris, d. 1838 Paris)

French architect and interior designer, partner with Pierre Fontaine. This pair of architects redesigned the Tuileries Palace, Paris, and Saint-Cloud, for the Emperor Napoleon from circa 1801 to 1804. They were named “architectes du gouvernement” by Napoleon in 1801 and “Architectes du Louvre et des Tuileries” in 1804. They helped create the influential Empire style of interior decoration.

Percier and Fontaine became acquainted with each other while both were studying architecture in Paris. Percier won the Prix de Rome in 1786 and spent the following years studying in Rome with Fontaine, who became his lifelong friend. They returned to Paris in 1790 and set up their own practice; their work eventually attracted the attention of Josephine Bonaparte, Napoleon’s wife, and she engaged them to renovate her Château de Malmaison (1800-03). From then on the Bonapartes became their principal patrons.

In their subsequent decorative work Percier and Fontaine virtually invented the severe but elegant Neoclassical blend of Greco-Roman and Egyptian forms and motifs that became known as the Empire style. They redid interiors, walls, and ceilings and designed furniture, accessories, and ornament for the old royal palaces and the new residences of the Bonapartes. Much of their work was done on the Louvre and the Tuileries palaces; they designed the arcades of the rue de Rivoli and the rue de Castiglione along the Louvre and designed the Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel connecting the Louvre and Tuileries (1806-08). They also worked on the Château de Saint-Cloud and the Château de Fontainebleau. They also influenced taste through their publications, including ‘Palais, maisons et autres édifices modernes dessinés a Rome’ (1798; ‘Palaces, Houses, and Other Modern Buildings Drawn in Rome’) and ‘Recueil de décorations intérieures’ (1801 and 1812; ‘Collection of Interior Designs’).

Financing grew scarce in the later years of the Empire, and the return of the Bourbons in 1814 aborted several grandiose Napoleonic building projects and sent Percier into permanent retirement. Fontaine remained active, designing the sombre Neoclassical Chapelle Expiatoire (1815-26) in Paris and continuing to restore the Louvre-Tuileries complex under both Charles X and Louis-Philippe. He retired in 1848.

Bedroom of Napoleon's Wife, Josephine
Bedroom of Napoleon's Wife, Josephine by

Bedroom of Napoleon's Wife, Josephine

To satisfy his immediate need for display, Napoleon had alterations undertaken at the former royal palaces plundered by the revolutionaries, and this work was entrusted mainly to Percier and Fontaine. The main influence was Imperial Rome whose successor Napoleonic France claimed to be.

The work for furnishings of Château Malmaison, acquired for Napoleon’s wife, Josephine, was carried out by Jean-Baptiste Lep�re (1761-1844) to designs by Percier and Fontaine and completed in 1803. Displaying classical architectural forms, strong contrasting colours, mahogany paneling highlighted with gilt bronze appliqu�s, and ceiling paintings in imitation of Pompeii and Herculaneum, the interiors exude luxury.

General view
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General view

Evocation of Imperial Rome was a prime purpose of the commemorative structures in the Napoleonic era, most of which were dedicated to Austerlitz. Constructed by Percier and Fontaine in the cour d’honneur of the Louvre in 1806-08, the Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel - crowned with the Byzantine bronze horses plundered from San Marco in Venice - borrows directly from the triumphal arch of Septimus Severus in Rome.

General view
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General view

The creation of this street axis, extended again in 1849-54, was among the most ambitious urban development measures of the Napoleonic era in Paris. The homogeneous fa�ades continue the tradition of the great squares of the 17th and 18th centuries.

Library
Library by

Library

To satisfy his immediate need for display, Napoleon had alterations undertaken at the former royal palaces plundered by the revolutionaries, and this work was entrusted mainly to Percier and Fontaine. The main influence was Imperial Rome whose successor Napoleonic France claimed to be.

The work for furnishings of Château Malmaison, acquired for Napoleon’s wife, Josephine, was carried out by Jean-Baptiste Lep�re (1761-1844) to designs by Percier and Fontaine and completed in 1803. Displaying classical architectural forms, strong contrasting colours, mahogany paneling highlighted with gilt bronze appliqu�s, and ceiling paintings in imitation of Pompeii and Herculaneum, the interiors exude luxury. This is particularly evident in the tripartite former library.

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