Salomon de Brosse

Presumed portrait of Salomon de Brosse by Peter Paul Rubens (1622)[1]
Luxembourg Palace,
street facade
State in 2007[2]
Original design[3]

Salomon de Brosse (1571 9 December 1626) was an influential early 17th-century French architect, a major influence on François Mansart. Salomon was born in Verneuil-en-Halatte, Oise, into a prominent Huguenot family, the grandson through his mother of the designer Jacques I Androuet du Cerceau and the son of the architect Jean de Brosse. He was established in practice in Paris in 1598 and was promoted to court architect in 1608.

De Brosse greatly influenced the sober and classicizing direction that French Baroque architecture was to take, especially in designing his most prominent commission, the Luxembourg Palace, Paris (1615-1624), for Marie de' Medici, whose patronage had been extended to his uncle. Salomon de Brosse simplified the crowded compositions of his Androuet du Cerceau heritage and contemporary practice, ranging the U-shaped block round an entrance court, as Carlo Maderno was doing at Palazzo Barberini, Rome, about the same time. The impetus for the plan is often traced to Palazzo Pitti, Florence, where the Medici queen had spent her youth, but the formal plan of Anet could also be adduced. He clad the building wholly in stone, avoiding the lively contrast of brick and stone that was the more familiar idiom. Though de Brosse was forced to relinquish his post on 24 March 1624, construction of the Luxembourg proceeded according to his plan and elevations; extensions made in the nineteenth century have not obscured his external elements.

The Parlement de Bretagne, Rennes (1618)

Other buildings that he designed include:

De Brosse died, aged 55, in Paris.

References

Notes

  1. Detail from the tapestry The Building of Constantinople from the series The History of Constantine, identified as de Brosse by John Coolidge of Harvard University: "A Portrait by Rubens of Salomon de Brosse", Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, vol. 24, no. 4 (December 1965), pp. 310–312.
  2. The entrance pavilion and the structures flanking the screen are the portions of the Luxembourg Palace least altered from de Brosse's original design (Coope 1996, p. 865). The screen was originally solid; the windows were added later (Ayers 2004, p. 130).
  3. Blondel 1752, book 3, chapter 8, plate 5.

Sources

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