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- François-Joseph Bélanger (12 April 1744 – 1 May 1818) was a French architect and decorator working in the Neoclassic style. Born in Paris, he studied at the Académie Royale d'Architecture (1764–1766) where he worked under Julien-David Le Roy and Pierre Contant d'Ivry, but did not win the coveted Prix de Rome that would have sent him to study at Rome; however, through Le Roy's circle he was introduced to some advanced neoclassical designers, such as Charles-Louis Clérisseau, Robert Adam's drawing-master, recently arrived from Rome, and was admitted to the Académie at the age of twenty. He began his career in 1767 working at the Menus Plaisirs du Roi designing ephemeral decorations for court fêtes, and by 1777 he was its director. In this position, he was in charge of the funeral preparations for Louis XV and the coronation coach of Louis XVI. The jewel cabinet he designed for the wedding of the Dauphin to Marie-Antoinette has not survived, but a drawing of it exists, and, most remarkably, the maquette presented for approval of the design, made of wax and painted paper on a wooden frame, (now at the Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore), which shows that it was very advanced for its date (designed in time to be delivered 4 May 1770), in a fully-developed Neoclassical taste, with caryatid demi-figures and framed medallions in blue and white Ten years later he purchased the position of chief architect to Monsieur, the comte d'Artois, brother of Louis XVI. For him Bélanger designed and constructed the party pavilion Château de Bagatelle in the Bois de Boulogne, 1777, winning his patron's bet with the Queen by completing the house in sixty-three days (and nights) and introducing décors in the style Étrusque. Bélanger constructed the Folie Saint James, a French landscape garden, in Neuilly from 1777-1780, and worked for the comte d'Artois at the Château of Maisons-Lafitte. During the Revolution he spent some time in the prison of Saint-Lazare. In 1813, at the death of Alexandre-Théodore Brongniart he presented himself successfully as candidate for completing the Bourse. From 1808 to 1813 he rebuilt the cupola of the Halle au blé, the former grain market that is the present Bourse de commerce of Paris. This was among the earliest uses of iron to enclose a long-span interior space. Bélanger designed and constructed numerous hôtels particuliers for Parisian aristocrats and bankers. He designed the Château de Méréville for Jean-Joseph de Laborde, 1784-86He designed interiors for the Hôtel Baudart de Saint-James, 12 Place Vendôme, and influenced garden designs of the epoch. He supervised the workshop supported by the connoisseur Louis-Marie-Augustin, duc d'Aumont, that produced hardstone and porphyry vases, pedestals, and tabletops, which were mounted with gilt-bronze ornaments to his designs. The late duc d'Aumont's collection was dispersed at auction, 1782: among the purchasers was the Queen. He died at Paris in 1818. Among the architects trained in his atelier was Joseph Ramee.
- François-Joseph Bélanger war ein französischer Architekt und Gartengestalter.
- François-Joseph Bélanger est un architecte et décorateur néo-classique français né à Paris en 1745 et mort à Paris en 1818.
- Fu il più importante architetto di giardini paesistici della Francia dell'epoca. Studiò all'Académie royale d'architecture e tra il 1765 ed il 1766 visitò l'Inghilterra. Nel 1777, in poco più di due mesi, realizzò lo Château de Bagatelle nel Bois de Boulogne, a Parigi, una delle sue opere migliori. In stile neoclassico, con decorazioni in stile etrusco, tra il 1778 ed il 1780 fu circondato da un notevole giardino all'inglese. Un altro giardino fu progettato verso il 1784 per un altro dei suoi padiglioni, le Folie Saint James di Neully. A Méréville, nel 1786, realizzò l'ultimo dei suoi grandi parchi. Lavorò in alcuni hôtel parigini e nel 1806 innalzò la cupola in ghisa per la Halle aux Blés, in sostituzione di una precedente cupola in legno costruita alcuni decenni prima.
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- François-Joseph Bélanger (12 April 1744 – 1 May 1818) was a French architect and decorator working in the Neoclassic style.
- François-Joseph Bélanger war ein französischer Architekt und Gartengestalter.
- François-Joseph Bélanger est un architecte et décorateur néo-classique français né à Paris en 1745 et mort à Paris en 1818.
- Fu il più importante architetto di giardini paesistici della Francia dell'epoca. Studiò all'Académie royale d'architecture e tra il 1765 ed il 1766 visitò l'Inghilterra. Nel 1777, in poco più di due mesi, realizzò lo Château de Bagatelle nel Bois de Boulogne, a Parigi, una delle sue opere migliori. In stile neoclassico, con decorazioni in stile etrusco, tra il 1778 ed il 1780 fu circondato da un notevole giardino all'inglese.
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