BOOKS ON ARCHITECTURE
Coming from a family of artists and artisans (his father Adrien was a joiner active between 1614 and 1634), Antoine Le Pautre, the brother of sculptor Jean Le Pautre, was an architect in Paris who designed the hôtel de Fontenay, the chapel at the Port-Royal Convent, and his masterpiece, the hôtel de Beauvais. There he brilliantly resolved the problems linked to the narrowness and the irregularity of the parcel (starting in 1654). Appointed Architect to the King's Buildings in 1648, then house architect to Gaston d'Orléans, the king's brother, in 1660, he created plans for Saint-Cloud. The celebrated cascade is attributed to him. He was among the first members of the Royal Academy of Architecture created in 1671. Yves Pauwels (Centre d’études supérieures de la Renaissance, Tours) – 2013 Critical bibliographyR. W. Berger, Antoine Le Pautre. A French Architect of the Era of Louis XIV, New York University Press, College Art Association of America, 1969. M. Préaud, Inventaire du fonds français, Graveurs du XVIIe siècle, Antoine Lepautre, Jacques Lepautre et Jean Lepautre, Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, 1993, XI, 1.
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