- Jacques Carlu
Jacques Carlu (July 4, 1890 Bonnières-sur-Seine - March 12, 1976 Paris) was a French
architect and designer, working mostly inArt Deco style, active in France and in the United States.Through the 1910s Carlu studied on site with British city planner
Thomas Hayton Mawson , Pittsburgh architects Palmer and Hornbostel, and in the Paris studios ofVictor Laloux . After winning thePrix de Rome in 1919, Carlu takes a number of academic positions in quick succession: director of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts at Fontainebleau, professor of architecture at theMassachusetts Institute of Technology from 1924 to 1934, and a position with theBeaux Arts Institute of Design in New York. With intensive transatlantic travel, Carlu becomes a sort of ambassador ofStreamline Moderne style.His most famous building is likely the Palais de Chaillot,
Trocadéro , near theEiffel Tower , which was designed for theExposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne (1937) . The building's long wings now serve as museum space, and it features sculptural groups byRaymond Delamarre ,Carlo Sarrabezolles andAlfred Bottiau .His other buildings include the 1957
NATO Headquarters in Paris. Among his important interiors are the 1930 Eaton Auditorium in Toronto (now known as "The Carlu"), the 1943 French Nationality Room at the University of Pittsburgh'sCathedral of Learning , and other venues.Carlu is buried at the
Passy Cemetery . He was the brother of French graphic designerJean Carlu .External links
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