Jacques Couëlle (1902–1996) was a French architect, whose work was marked by the movement known as architecture-sculpture.

Biography

Jacques Couëlle is a self-taught architect. Uncategorised, he remains on the margins of major movements in architecture and in particular the Modern Movement. In 1946 he founded "the Research Centre of natural structures". Nicknamed "the architect of billionaires"[1] he has made exceptional homes.[2]

The architecture of Jacques Couëlle, with its sculptural forms of concrete designed and carved,[3] evokes the movement of architecture-sculpture born after the war.

The specificity of Couëlle's architecture is its relationship to nature. His houses fit perfectly into their natural environment because they borrow their forms. They are "home-landscape". This relationship with nature is associated with Antoni Gaudí's organic architecture like the famous Park Güell (1900–1914) in Barcelona, where the paths carved into the slope as caves follow the contours of the land.

An eccentric character, he was a friend of Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dalí. For his artistic merits, he was awarded the Legion of Honour at the French Academy.

He worked together with his son Savin Jacques Couëlle (1929–2020).

Achievements

References

  1. "Architekt der Milliardäre" @ Volcania.
  2. "Maison Jacques Couëlle - un lieu extra-ordinaire". Architecturedecollection.fr. Archived from the original on 2012-02-22. Retrieved 2012-03-10.
  3. The versatility of concrete allows for creativity and individualism Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine adopted from an article by George Perkin. Reprinted courtesy of CONCRETE QUARTERLY, Cement and Concrete Association, 52 Grosvenor Gardens, London SW 1, England
  4. "Maison " Les pierres levées " | Jacques Couëlle | Louveciennes (78)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-04-01. Retrieved Jul 19, 2022.
  5. http://www.estatenetfrance.com/property/Exceptional-Villa-in-Super-Cannes-with-Sea-Views/5065/

Bibliography

  • Michel Ragon, "Jacques Couëlle,inCimaise, No. 103, August–October 1971.
  • Luigi Gilbert Couëlle Jacques:architectural brackets, Brussels, Peter Mardaga, 1982.
  • Luigi Gilbert,Jacques Couëlle: live elsewhere now,the catalog of the exhibition at the Pompidou Center, Paris: Center Georges Pompidou, 1988.
  • "Jacques Couëlle, Architecture Movement Continuity (AMC), No. 69, March 1996, p. 18-19.
  • Frances Arnold, "Jacques Couëlle: houses carved in stone, Architecture Movement Continuity (AMC), No. 77, February 1997, pp. 56–59.
  • Jacques-Couelle Castellaras-le-Vieux houses landscape a 52-minute documentary by Patricia Civel and Jerome Sadler
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