La couleur à Lille au xviie siècle, de Philippe IV à Louis XIV

A polychromatic land of white and blue stone and pink, yellow and black brick, Flanders has sought colour combinations in building materials since the Middle Ages. Its French-speaking capital, Lille, was the city in the south of the Catholic Netherlands where plants imported by the Dutch East Indies...

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Main Author: Étienne Poncelet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles 2002-02-01
Series:Bulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/crcv/64
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spelling doaj-a1cfce288ccb46fb8ba8ce8bd55382e52020-11-24T23:56:51ZengCentre de Recherche du Château de VersaillesBulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles1958-92712002-02-0110.4000/crcv.64La couleur à Lille au xviie siècle, de Philippe IV à Louis XIVÉtienne PonceletA polychromatic land of white and blue stone and pink, yellow and black brick, Flanders has sought colour combinations in building materials since the Middle Ages. Its French-speaking capital, Lille, was the city in the south of the Catholic Netherlands where plants imported by the Dutch East Indies Company acclimatized and where the ‘Joyous Entry’ celebrations of the counts, Dukes of Burgundy, archdukes and kings of Spain took place. During the golden age of Burgundy, this tradition of luxuriance was reflected in the increasing use of colours on buildings, a trend that would endure until the siege of Lille by Louis XIV in 1667. The ‘Spanish’ gates display brickwork enamelled in colour. The red brick and grey sandstone entrance façade of the Hospice Comtesse is set off by a yellow ochre colourwash. The Vieille Bourse (Old Stock Exchange) flaunts its colourful facades resembling a piece of cabinetmaking, with incrustations of pearly stones and brick gleaming like tortoiseshell. The French-Lillois taste for colour was passed down through the city-centre reconstruction in the seventeenth century, as shown in the scale model of 1743. Restorations undertaken in the last ten years or so have revealed this bright urban decorative tradition in a number of other main squares in northern French cities.http://journals.openedition.org/crcv/64badigeonbriquecitadellegrèsordonnanceplan-relief
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Étienne Poncelet
spellingShingle Étienne Poncelet
La couleur à Lille au xviie siècle, de Philippe IV à Louis XIV
Bulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
badigeon
brique
citadelle
grès
ordonnance
plan-relief
author_facet Étienne Poncelet
author_sort Étienne Poncelet
title La couleur à Lille au xviie siècle, de Philippe IV à Louis XIV
title_short La couleur à Lille au xviie siècle, de Philippe IV à Louis XIV
title_full La couleur à Lille au xviie siècle, de Philippe IV à Louis XIV
title_fullStr La couleur à Lille au xviie siècle, de Philippe IV à Louis XIV
title_full_unstemmed La couleur à Lille au xviie siècle, de Philippe IV à Louis XIV
title_sort la couleur à lille au xviie siècle, de philippe iv à louis xiv
publisher Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
series Bulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
issn 1958-9271
publishDate 2002-02-01
description A polychromatic land of white and blue stone and pink, yellow and black brick, Flanders has sought colour combinations in building materials since the Middle Ages. Its French-speaking capital, Lille, was the city in the south of the Catholic Netherlands where plants imported by the Dutch East Indies Company acclimatized and where the ‘Joyous Entry’ celebrations of the counts, Dukes of Burgundy, archdukes and kings of Spain took place. During the golden age of Burgundy, this tradition of luxuriance was reflected in the increasing use of colours on buildings, a trend that would endure until the siege of Lille by Louis XIV in 1667. The ‘Spanish’ gates display brickwork enamelled in colour. The red brick and grey sandstone entrance façade of the Hospice Comtesse is set off by a yellow ochre colourwash. The Vieille Bourse (Old Stock Exchange) flaunts its colourful facades resembling a piece of cabinetmaking, with incrustations of pearly stones and brick gleaming like tortoiseshell. The French-Lillois taste for colour was passed down through the city-centre reconstruction in the seventeenth century, as shown in the scale model of 1743. Restorations undertaken in the last ten years or so have revealed this bright urban decorative tradition in a number of other main squares in northern French cities.
topic badigeon
brique
citadelle
grès
ordonnance
plan-relief
url http://journals.openedition.org/crcv/64
work_keys_str_mv AT etienneponcelet lacouleuralilleauxviiesiecledephilippeivalouisxiv
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