- Jean-Michel Chevotet
Infobox Architect
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name = Jean-Michel Chevotet
nationality = French
birth_date =11 July 1698
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death_date =4 December 1772
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practice_name =
significant_buildings=Château de Petit-Bourg
significant_projects =
significant_design =
awards =Prix de Rome (1722)|Jean-Michel Chevotet (11 July 1698 - 4 December 1772) was a French architect. He and
Pierre Contant d'Ivry were among the most eminent Parisian architects of the day and designed in both the restrained FrenchRococo manner, known as the "Louis XV style " and in the "Goût grec " (literally "Greek taste") phase of earlyNeoclassicism .Life
In 1722, Chevotet won the Académie royale d'architecture's very first
Prix de Rome with a study of atriumphal arch . A skilled draughtsman, he illustrated several architectural treatises, such asJean-Baptiste de Monicart 's "Versailles immortalisé" (1720-1725) andJean Mariette 's "L’Architecture française" (1727). On the death ofGermain Boffrand in 1754, he became a member of the first rank of the Academie.He and d'Ivray were tutors to
Claude Nicolas Ledoux , whom they introduced toClassical architecture , in particular the temples ofPaestum .In 1748 and 1753, he unsuccessfully submitted 4 projects for the future Place Louis XV (now
Place de la Concorde ), and in 1764 was not commissioned for the extension of thePalais Bourbon .Works
Hôtels
He was more successful in establishing his reputation through his aristocratic clientele and adapted many existing
Paris ian hôtels to the modern taste, notably working on:
*hôtel Molé (also called hôtel de Roquelaure) (1741-1742), rue Saint-Dominique (today 246 boulevard Saint-Germain)
*hôtel de Béthune-Sully (also called hôtel de Lesdiguières) (1756-1757), rue Saint-Dominique (today 248 boulevard Saint-Germain)
*hôtel Perrinet de Jars, 33 rue du Faubourg-Saint-Honoré
*the Pavillon de Hanovre forLouis François Armand du Plessis, duc de Richelieu ,Marshal of France , commemorating his victories in Hanover, on rue Neuve-Saint-Augustin (deconstructed for the construction of the Palais Berlitz on the boulevard des Italiens, and rebuilt in 1932 in the park of the château deSceaux )Country houses and gardens
He also built country houses around Paris, notably:
*the house and gardens of château de Champlâtreux (1751-1757) forMathieu-François Molé , president of the Great Council, also designing the gardens
*the house of Château d'Arnouville atArnouville-lès-Gonesse (1751-57), for Jean-Baptiste de Machault d'Arnouville, president of the Great Council, collaborating with d'Ivry
*the neo-classical house and gardens ofChâteau de Petit-Bourg at Évry (1756) forGermain Louis Chauvelin , president of the Great Council, destroyed 1944
*the gardens atBelœil (1754 and 1760) for prince Charles-Joseph de Ligne
*the gardens atOrsay (1758-1764) forPierre Gaspard Marie Grimod d'Orsay .He may also have worked on the modernisation of the
Château of Thoiry (Yvelines ).Bibliography
*Baritou, Jean-Louis, Chevotet, Contant, Chaussard, Paris, Délégation à l'Action Artistique de la Ville de Paris, La Manufacture, 1987, ISBN 2-904638-98-9
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