Victor Louis

This article is about an architect. For the Soviet journalist, see Victor Louis (journalist).
Victor Louis

Victor Louis (10 May 1731, Paris – 2 July 1800, Paris) was a French architect, disqualified on a technicality from winning the Prix de Rome in architecture in 1755.[1]

Louis' masterpiece is the Grand Théâtre de Bordeaux of 1780.[2] He also designed other theatres, including the theatre of the Comédie-Française on the rue de Richelieu (1790) and the Théâtre National de la rue de la Loi (1793, demolished).[3] Other buildings include the Intendance in Besançon (completed 1776), the garden galleries of the Palais-Royal in Paris (1781–1784), and the Château du Bouilh near Bordeaux (1786-1789, unfinished).[4] A full biography by Charles Marionneau was published in Bordeaux in 1881.[5] In 1770 he married the pianist and composer Marie-Emmanuelle Bayon.

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References

Notes
  1. John 1998, p. 725.
  2. Lacouture 1994.
  3. Prudent & Guadet 1903.
  4. Braham 1980, pp. 145–157.
  5. Marionneau 1881.
Sources


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