Art Nouveau and Art Déco mosaïc , tiles and ceramic works .

dimanche 25 octobre 2015

Louxor Cinema

 

At 170 Boulevard Magenta,  the amazing room of  "Le Louxor" is a unique place.,
Henri Silberberg, a businessman with many activities, intends to take advantage of this emerging industry in 1919 and bought the Haussmann building of dual address 53 Boulevard de la Chapelle and 170 boulevard Magenta, strategic location to build a large hall cinema. He appealed to the architect Henri Zipcy and file a dossier to the prefect of the Seine. Work can begin in 1920. The cinema has 1195 seats with a great room, first balcony and gallery. Inside, the designer is responsible Amédée Tiberti stencil paintings and reliefs, brilliantly designed with a real job on color.




The Gentil and Bourdet company specializing in ceramics, makes exterior decoration made of fine  mosaics  on three fronts. Everything is done in an Art Deco style inspired by ancient Egypt: some elements are direct copies of Egyptian art (scarabs, lotus and papyrus friezes, winged disks), others are more fantasized elements Egypt seen by Western as fanciful hieroglyphics decorating the beams of the hall ceiling. The name of the room is chosen in reference to the Egyptian city built on the ruins of the ancient city of Thebes, the ancient capital of the kings of Egypt: Luxor. The Louxor is a temple that contrasts sharply with the Haussmann buildings. If egyptomania is fashionable in France in the 1920s, especially after the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun, Lle Louxor however is a unique example of Egyptian room in Paris. To find similar premises, go to the United States, have a look for example  to the Hollywood Grauman's Egyptian Theatre, which opened in 1922.

The Louxor was inaugurated on the evening of October 6, 1921.

 This golden age was short lived as early as the late 1950s, attendance down. News migrate from the great to the small screen, despite the advent of color, the public gradually abandoned cinemas. Between 1955 and 1966, the number of annual entries  goes down from 430 000 to 150 000. The  Louxor tries to resist this crisis: major renovations are carried out in 1954 and 1964. The number of seats is reduced; it is converted to CinemaScope and all of its technical equipment is upgraded. Above the porch is painted a large colorful mural, depicting iconic characters and film actors such as John Wayne and Batman. A turning point is taken in the late sixties, when attendance reached its lowest level. The operator of Louxor drop ticket prices from June to February francs, and programming changes radically. French films are abandoned and the focus is on less expensive films for rent. The action films, sometimes from Asia, series B, spaghetti westerns and epic films,  now form the bulk of programming.

 The direction of Louxor attempts to deal with the crisis of the entire cinema industry. The decision is made to turn from the 1970s to the Egyptian and North African cinema  that receives some resonance within the mixed population of the Goutte d'Or. In the early 1980s, Indian films, subtitled in French or Arabic, are becoming increasingly common in programming: some classic (Mother India , by Mehboob Khan) are regularly scheduled alongside more recent productions. The Louxor, with its new pinball, plays a social role at the crossroads Barbès-Rochechouart: it is a living place, a meeting place as much as a movie theater.
 The Louxor is old, and some think, in the 1970s, to protect this historic building.
 In 1981, the new Minister of Culture, Jack Lang, registered the facade and roof  to the additional Inventory of Historic Monuments. The Louxor was able to maintain a viable attendance until the late 1970s, but he can not resist the irremediable drop in the number of spectators that begins in 1976 and brings attendance to 274,750 entries in 1982. On 29 November 1983 the big red curtain closes at the end of  Qaid (an urdu movie..). The next day the Tati discounter  group becomes the owner of  the place for six million francs.
This is the beginning of a long journey through the desert to the old "Palais cinema". Redevelopment projects succeed without success. Pathé had prepared a restructuring plan, before giving up. Tati are plans to create a store, but also gives up. In 1986, the Louxor is transformed into a nightclub and becomes The Evasion. This Caribbean nightclub closes a few months later to be replaced by Megatown, "the biggest gay disco of France." The establishment quickly closes. While rehabilitation projects follow one another in the 1990s, the walls of the Louxor deteriorate gradually as tags and posters. Registration for the historical extra Inventory protects the building from destruction or inadequate restructuring, but the owner does not respond to requests for renovation of the facade.
Local residents, gathered in the Barbes Action Association mobilized in 2001 to save the Louxor. The mobilization of the people, supported by the City Council, finally paid off, since July 25, 2003, the city becomes owner of Louxor.
 Provisional safeguard measures are decided and an important diagnosis is made, revealing the scope of work. In 2007, the City Council made the choice to give back to Louxor its original function, that of a movie theater. The people must wait until June 2008 for a rehabilitation project to be retained. The City of Paris emits a tender and selected from 65 submissions that of architect Philippe Pumain whose project reconciles the functional aspect to the return of the original appearance of the place. The choice is made to make  Louxor the appearance it had in the 1920s, which means at first a research, almost archeology, to reveal the original decoration, covered with various layers of paintings.





   On 17 April 2013, the Louxor is inaugurated. This historic site now regained its luster and the letters "LOUXOR - PALACE CINEMA" are again displayed proudly on the Barbès crossroades. The facades of Henry Zipcy always fulfill their role: catch the eye of passersby. The Louxor, ranked room Arthouse, now offers a varied program, including many first-run movies, with focus on the South and the cinema for children. Beyond its heritage dimension, which a lot of interest, the Louxor is  again what he had always been: a movie theater.


samedi 10 octobre 2015

La Cigale

   Travelling to Nantes, go and eat  at La Cigale.... Gorgeous Art Nouveau tiles ...and good food.







 La Cigale illuminates the heart of Nantes since 1 April 1895: it is the work of architect ceramist Emile Libaudière 

 


lundi 14 septembre 2015

lundi 24 août 2015

Buy some good pork in downtown Angers..

...in this still running business.
have a look at the boar head drawn with leaf-like patterns.




Angers, rue Beaurepaire


dimanche 19 juillet 2015

mercredi 1 juillet 2015

Sante was here.

   Remember that Sante Vallar guy?
  Here is the house he lived in. It's located in Tours  in the Febvotte district.
    And it's ... Art Déco!!!!
  






Courtesy from:  the guy  from theTours area...

vendredi 26 juin 2015

Kléber

  A former Estage agency : its storefront is covered with mosaics made by  Odorico .



samedi 20 juin 2015

Aix Les Bains

The National baths of Aix les Bains  , built from 1777 by King Victor Amadeus III of Savoy, have been enlarged in 1932.
 The new Art Deco style building has a particular hall with  black and whitemosaïcs on the grounds.





  The column on the wall is touting the merits of brimstone in the local water, while a female figure is resting...



samedi 13 juin 2015

Donald's

  On the floor of my favourite pub in Nevers. Probably one of the early works of Pietro Favret.
Still in good condition after so many years of stepping, drinking and spilling booze on the floor...


mardi 19 mai 2015

The greek puzzle.

 Richard Davis. is our" honorable correspondent" from Whidbey Island , Washington. ( For beginners:  not Washington DC, where Obama is staying, but Washington, Northwest, whith Seattle as main city ). Back from a trip to Greece he shares with our small frenchy blog  these pictures of a facade entirely covered with mosaic ....



   But ..this time, it's no temple floor..

   And  no ancient spa ...




  It's the front of a printing and reprographic trade, probably from the 50s.






What an uncommon spotI like the frsh and somewhat naïve look of the characters and machinery .

 Many thanks to Richard

dimanche 17 mai 2015

Inspired

At Decize, the real estate agency took over the premises of a "mini supermarket" with a lovely Art Deco decor mosaic created by D'Andrea, an Italian mosaic master ...


A close up ... Hum..we can see i a pattern lotus leaves .... It is rare in the area.


Looks like those ones...

Here , we are in a closed and discreet place .... L 'Etoile Bleue, it is not a supermarket, but .... an old and chic brothel in Tours! ... This design is the work of  , a fellow of D'Andrea: their families are almost ofthe same village of Friuli, a northern region of Italy.

We found where your inspiration came from ...... Little rascal, we 'took  hand in the bag!

vendredi 15 mai 2015

Rigolettes.



 This beautiful blue mosaic storefront, from the 1930s, was once Charles Bohu's  confectionery. It is located rue de la Marne in Nantes. The "rigolette"is a candy shell filled  with a fruit pulp  (pineapple, blackcurrant, lemon, raspberry and tangerine). This candy is named after Charles Bohu own cat, Rigolette, itself an  homage to the famous  Verdi's opera: Rigoletto 

 The "rigolettes" were so  successful that, in 1930 Charles Bohu could contract  the famous  Isidore Odorico Italian mosaist to decorate the facade of his shop .

 The candy is no longer made here,  but the beautiful blue and golden façade has been preserved.

samedi 4 avril 2015

Dornes

     Look at the very detailed work  on this former butcher shop in Dornes.


jeudi 12 février 2015

Seeds

  This shop window surrounded by colourful mosaïc used to be a retailer for VILMORIN, a brand for seeds for gardeners.It is located in Corbigny.


Favret and Moreau

   The War Memorial of the Great War was built in Lamotte-Beuvron  (home of the Tatin sisters who created the wold Famous Tarte Tatin)  The style of this in the early 1920s  building that refers to both  classicism in its composition and  "art deco"  style in lettering and drawing.
   It was designed by. Moreau, architect, Pietro  Favret, from Nevers made the mosaïcs : a winged victory wearing a crown of laurel leaves, and panels displays the names of those of the villagers who were killed during  WW1.




samedi 7 février 2015

Nantes

    Daniel Enocq spend 10 years of its life in recording short Youtube videos  displaying mosaïcs  on old shops   in western France.

 He also took  hundred of pictures. Here are some of them, in Nantes. Butcher, fish shop, delicatessen...all you need is here..with works of Odorico, Zannieri... and others.
Respect...

.




dimanche 1 février 2015

Briare

 

Look at these small coloured cubes.

  There are just plenty of them on the fronts of old stores in Nevers city, as well as in the whole ccountry.. .
Now, please take a double decimeter and measure them ..... They are 2.5cm by 2.5cm ? (or 1 inch x 1 inch ...) ....These are certainly tesserae made of Briare enamel . With  their standard size ( they are all also usually 2.3 mm deep)  they were mass-produced until mid- twentieth century to decorate the stores at a reasonable cost ( dairies , butchers, fish markets were the main users ...). The secret of their low cost (related to one would name today " perceived quality") is due to something special (in addition to being produced in large volumes ) : they are made based on " simple" colored glass paste to which was added .... goat milk .
  This invention by the Bapterosses brothers ; including Jean Felix , owner of the factory Enamels of Briare

( And incidentally great-grandfather of Bernadette Chirac, wife of former french president Jacques Chirac, who as a child would often spend his holidays in the area.)