- Philippe de La Guêpière
(Pierre Louis) Philippe de La Guêpière, (c. 1715 –
October 30 ,1773 ) was a Frencharchitect whose main commissions were fromKarl Eugen, Duke of Württemberg .Biography
Philippe was born in
Sceaux, Hauts-de-Seine , south ofParis , the son of Lucien de La Guêpière, clerk of the works at thechâteau de Sceaux , where the architect employed by Louis XIV's natural son, the duc du Maine, had been his uncle, Jacques de La Guêpière (1670–1734).Apparently having followed the architectural courses of the theoretician
Jacques-François Blondel , from the 1730s La Guêpière took courses in architecture in Paris. He attended theAcadémie royale d'architecture . In 1750 he issued his engraved folio volume "Plans, coupes et élévations de différents palais et églises". That same year Leopoldo Retti, who was engaged in building the Neues Schloss inStuttgart for Karl Eugen, made an artistic reconnoitering trip to Paris, in the company of the duke's garden designer Hemmerling. In Paris he oversaw the engraving of a suite of four folio sheets of the floorplan, section, elevations and profiles of the schloss that was being built. In Paris he may have encountered La Guêpière. At any rate, in 1752 Karl Eugen named La Guêpière architect to his court ofWürttemberg , to fill the post left empty by the unexpected death of Retti, in September the previous year.La Guêpière was one of the group of French-trained architects, like
François de Cuvillies inMunich , who brought the latest French style to the small German courts. He was occupied with works at the ducal "Residenz" of Stuttgart, the Neues Schloss that was built adjacent to the former palace [http://www.schloesser-magazin.de/eng/objekte/st/st_ne/st_ne01e.php] , and also at that ofKarlsruhe . He was also responsible for the palatial retreat Schloss Solitude nearStuttgart and the waterside "Schloss" ofMonrepos in the grounds ofLudwigsburg (1760–64).At Stuttgart La Guêpière lost little time in engraving and publishing further designs. His "Recueil de differens projets d’architecture représentant plusieurs monuments publics et autres" (Stuttgart, Jean Nicolas Stoll) was published on December 11, 1752. Like his Paris engravings, it broke with earlier traditions of architectural treatises by featuring just the works of a single architect (Klaiber).
La Guêpière's work at the Stuttgart "Neues Schloss" was never completed. By 1756 the shell of the wing that faced the city was completed, the central "Mittelbau" erected and the interior decoration in the garden wing was complete. First the garden wing was destroyed by fire in 1762, then Karl Eugen faced opposition over his extravagance and abandoned Stuttgart for
Ludwigsburg . The "Neues Schloss" was bombed to a ruin inWorld War II and has been rebuilt as a shell with modern interiors and some reproduced reception rooms [http://www.schloesser-magazin.de/eng/objekte/st/st_ne/st_ne01e.php] .At
Ludwigsburg Palace , the alternate seat of the duke, La Guêpière was occupied in 1757–1758, in providing a court theater and in refurbishing the main block of the palace. Here the palace was not badly damaged in World War II. The theatre retains its stage machinery constructed under the direction of La Guêpière, the oldest surviving stage machinery preserved in Europe. The water pavilionMon Repos was built from 1755 and completed in 1764 [Hlawtsch 1991] .He left Württemberg in 1768, with Schloss Solitude almost completed, to return to Paris, where he was one of the first architects to turn away from
Rococo , developing his style towards the "Goût grec " the "Greek taste' that was the early forerunner ofneoclassicism . His folio volume "Recueil d'esquisses d'architecture" was issued from Paris in 1765.La Guêpière was the architect of the neoclassical "hôtel de ville" of
Montbéliard inFranche-Comté , where his patron Karl Eugen was "stathouder". The "corps de logis" of the château was also rebuilt in more stylish and commodious fashion.His works in France include interiors (since replaced) for the former
bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève . A pavilion to contain amenagerie at the Château de Sceaux, sometimes credited to him, was built by Jacques de La Guêpière.He died in Paris.
The only
monograph devoted to La Guêpière is Hans Andreas Klaiber's "Der Württembergische Oberbaudirektor Philippe de La Guêpière: Ein Beitrag zur Kunstgeschichte der Architektur am Ende des Spätbarock", published in Stuttgart in 1959.References
*Thieme/Becker "Allgemeines Kunstlexikon" vol. XV, pp 211-212.
* [http://www.schloesser-magazin.de/eng/objekte/st/st_ne/st_ne01e.php Schloesser-magazin:] The New Palace en icon
* [http://www.schloesser-magazin.de/eng/objekte/st/st_so/st_so01e.php Schloesser-magazin:] Solitude
* [http://www.cosmovisions.com/LaGuepiere.htm Imago Mundi: Dictionnaire Biographique]
* [http://www.ilab.org/services/catalogues.php?membernr=1293&catnr=1345&pg=4&br= Leopold Retti's engravings (no. 57) and La Guêpière's Stuttgart "Recueil", 1752 (no 59)]
* [http://194.254.135.72/museeIDF/histoire%20domaine/ils_ont_cree_le_domaine_de_sceau.htm "Ils ont crées la domaine de Sceaux"] brief notes of Jacques de La Guêpière
* [http://www.birgit-hlawatsch.de/502709944310ebf01/50270993e30025025/index.html Birgit Hlawtsch, 1991. "Monrepos: 400 Jahre württembergische Geschichte"]
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