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Hôtel Guimard

Coordinates: 48°52′17.97″N 2°20′0.68″E / 48.8716583°N 2.3335222°E / 48.8716583; 2.3335222
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

48°52′17.97″N 2°20′0.68″E / 48.8716583°N 2.3335222°E / 48.8716583; 2.3335222

The Hôtel Guimard was a private home located at 9 rue de la Chaussée-d'Antin in Paris, France. Commissioned by the Opera dancer Marie-Madeleine Guimard,[citation needed] it was designed by the architect Claude-Nicolas Ledoux in the neoclassical style,[citation needed] then built from 1770 to 1773. It is noted for having boasted its own 500-seat theater. The building was ultimately demolished as part of the massive urban renewal program headed by Baron Haussmann,[citation needed] which largely reshaped the city during the Second French Empire.

History

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The facade of the Hôtel Guimard
Hôtel Guimard, dessin de Jean-Baptiste Maréchal
Map of the Hotel Guimard, with a theatre above the entrance

Marie-Madeleine Guimard was a ballerina for the Paris Opera. She made her fortune as mistress of the Prince de Soubise and had a hôtel particulier (or mansion) in Pantin, a Paris suburb.

The Hôtel Guimard was nicknamed the "Terpsichore temple", in reference to Mlle Guimard (Terpsichore was the Muse of dance). The site featured a sculpture titled Terpsichore Crowned by Apollo, a low relief of the Muse of Dance riding a chariot "pulled by Amours surrounded by Bacchantes and Wildlife and followed by the graces of choreography".[1][2]

Above the entrance was a ballet hall with a ceiling painted by Taravel, painter of the king.[citation needed] The theater was a 500-seat masterpiece. It opened on December 8, 1772, ending the shows of the hôtel of Pantin (which included her previous theatre). The first dinner in the hotel was banned by the Archbishop of Paris and the food was taken to a priest for distribution to the poor.[2] Mlle Guimard welcomed as courtesan the financier Jean-Joseph de Laborde, the bishop of Taranto, and other important persons.[citation needed]

In a career of luxury, she offered three dinner parties a week, according to Edmond de Goncourt.[citation needed] One dinner was for the greatest of lords and those of the highest consideration at Court; a second dinner invited writers, artists, and wits that all but rivaled the salon of Mme Geoffrin; a third dinner was devoted to all the most ravishing and lascivious young women.[3]

Mlle Guimard uniquely sold her hotel by holding a lottery, selling 2,500 tickets at 120 francs each. On 25 May 1785, the Countess of Lau won the hotel with only one ticket. Lau then sold the hotel for 500,000 francs to the banker Jean-Frédéric Perregaux. It was here that Jacques Laffitte began his career as a banker, under the tutelage of Perregaux.[1][2]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b Guittonneau, Pierre-Henri (2017), "" Entour Paris ", les petites villes sur l'eau dans l'aire d'influence de la capitale au XVe siècle, d'après les minutes de notaires du Châtelet", Les limites de Paris (xiie-xviiie siècles), Presses universitaires du Septentrion, pp. 57–76, doi:10.4000/books.septentrion.10872, ISBN 978-2-7574-1495-8
  2. ^ a b c "Théâtres de société". homes.chass.utoronto.ca. Archived from the original on 2012-07-22. Retrieved 2020-05-03.
  3. ^ "Rue de la Chaussée-d'Antin". Archived from the original on 2008-12-16. Retrieved 2008-12-16.

Further reading

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  • Braham, Allan (1989). "The 1770s: the patronage of Mlle Guimard and Mme du Barry; the saltworks of Arc and Senans; the theatre of Besançon; the Hôtel de Thelusson". The Architecture of the French Enlightenment. University of California Press.