Félix Callet

Félix-Emmanuel Callet (23 May 1791 – August 1854) was a French neoclassical architect.[note 1]

Félix Callet
Born
Félix-Emmanuel Callet

(1791-05-23)May 23, 1791
DiedAugust 1, 1854(1854-08-01) (aged 63)
NationalityFrench
Alma materÉcole des Beaux-arts
Atelier Delespine
OccupationArchitect
AwardsPrix de Rome (1819)
PracticeArchitect of the City of Paris
Signature
Neoclassical

Early life and family

Felix-Emmanuel Callet was born in Paris, the son of Antoine Callet (1755–1850), architect of civil buildings and highways of the city of Paris, known for his biographical works on French architects of the sixteenth century and his rich collection of books and antiques, amassed at his house in the Rue de la Pépinière and completed by his son. Felix was the elder brother of Adolphe Apollodorus Callet (1799–1831), historical painter and cousin of Antoine-François Callet (1799–1850), also an architect (not to be confused with the painter of the same name).[1]

Education

Felix Callet was admitted to the School of Fine Arts in 1809. A pupil of his father and Pierre-Jules Delespine, he won the Grande médaille d'émulation in 1818 and achieved first class in 1819. He finished second in the Prix de Rome in 1818 with the topic: "a public promenade" before winning the Grand Prix the following year with his subject "a cemetery", tied with Jean-Baptiste Lesueur. Resident at the Villa Medici, his time in Rome included a project for reconstruction of the Forum of Pompeii in 1822. In collaboration with Lesueur, he published a book entitled Architecture italienne, ou palais, maisons et autres édifices de l'Italie moderne,[2] of which some plates were exhibited at the Salon of 1827.[3]

Career

He was appointed architect for the city of Paris and taught his art to future architects. The architects Adolphe Azemard,[4] Lucien-Dieudonné Bessières,[5] Amant Constant-Mathurin Chalange,[6] Jules Duru,[7] Laurent-Amable Fauconnier,[8] Jean Charles Geslin,[9] Jean Jordan,[10] Jean-Jacques Mellerio,[11] Louis-Alphonse Nassau,[12] Leon Ohnet,[13] Pierre-Christophe Quinegagne,[14] Jacques-Alfred Ruelle,[15] François-Alexandre-Tingry Lehuby[16] and Victor Nicolas Vollier,[17] were all taught by Felix Callet or possibly his father.

Felix Callet was one of the founding members of the Société centrale des architectes in 1840.

Halles centrales

In 1845, he partnered with Victor Baltard, who had been working for two years on the proposed new central market, Les Halles. After the first plan was presented in 1848, the two architects accepted a new project, whose works commenced in 1851. Their part of an outdoor stone structure bearing a type of metal frame in the style of Polonceau however was quickly criticised, by Hector Horeau, who called for a project that did not hide the metal, and by those who scoffed at the massive aspect of this "Fortress Halles".[18] Work stopped in 1853 and the first pavilion was finally dismantled in 1866.[19] A new project more in line with the wishes of the administration, with visible metal structures and simple brick fillings instead of stone façades, was proposed by the two architects between the end of 1853 and the beginning of 1854. The first two pavilions (demolished in 1972) were inaugurated in October 1857, three years after the death of Callet, Baltard continuing the work until 1874.

Grandson of the architect, politician Marcel Habert demanded in 1912 that covered walkways in the central Halles should be named in Callet's honour. The proposal was approved by the Paris City Council in 1914.[20]

Works

Villa Bartholoni (court side)
Original Gare d'Austerlitz
Tattet family monument, Cimetière du Père-Lachaise

All located in Paris unless otherwise stated:

Notes

  1. The register entry in L'état civil gives a death date of 1 August but other biographical notes such as Lance (cf. bibliography), state 2 August.

References

  1. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 203.
  2. Callet, Felix; Lesueur, Jean-Baptiste (1827) [1827–1829]. Architecture italienne, ou palais, maisons et autres édifices de l'Italie moderne [Italian Architecture, or palaces, houses and other buildings of modern Italy] (in French). Paris.
  3. Auvray, Louis; Bellier de La Chavignerie, Émile (1882). Dictionnaire général des artistes de l'École française depuis l'origine des arts du dessin jusqu'à nos jours [General dictionary of artists of the French school from the origin of the arts of drawing to the present day] (in French). Vol. I. Paris: Renouard. p. 190.
  4. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 165.
  5. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 179.
  6. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 208.
  7. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 252.
  8. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 258.
  9. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 274.
  10. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 303.
  11. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 345.
  12. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 357.
  13. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 361.
  14. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 380.
  15. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 395.
  16. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 413.
  17. David de Pénanrun, Delaire & Roux 1907, p. 427.
  18. Brault, Élie (1893). Les Architectes par leurs œuvres [Architects by their works] (in French). Vol. III. Paris: Laurens. pp. 20, 325.
  19. "Pavillon des Halles centrales, 1866" (in French). Vergue. 6 July 2014. Retrieved 21 July 2014.
  20. Rigaud, Jean-Jacques. Recueil de renseignements relatifs à la culture des beaux-arts à Genève. pp. 445–448. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  21. Base Mérimée: Ancien siège de la Chambre de Commerce de Paris, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  22. Langlois, Amédée (1857). Fouquier, Armand (ed.). Le Paris de Louis-Philippe. p. 376. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)

Bibliography

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