Paul Sédille



Paul Sédille (16 June 1836, Paris – 6 January 1900) was a French architect and theorist; and designed the 1880 reconstruction of the iconic Magasins du Printemps department store in Paris.

Life
Though Sédille is best known for his Printemps design, he was also associated with the Creusot family foundry and was very active in professional associations and architectural education in the 1880s. He wrote a number of compelling pieces of architectural criticism, especially his review of contemporary Viennese and British architecture, and reflected what were by and large Teutonic theoretical concerns that have come to be understood as architectural realism, based on the works of Gottfried Semper.

Directly related to his interest in Semper, Sédille was an advocate of highly-coloured polychrome architecture. His participation in the Universal Expositions of 1878 and 1889 in Paris were demonstration pieces of his approach of integrating colorful terra cotta tilework and structural into the vocabulary of classical, beaux-arts architectural forms.

Sédille made his mark as a private architect executing residential commissions during an age that celebrated heroic, civic works such as the Paris Opéra (1860–1875) by Charles Garnier or the Palais de Justice (Paris, 1857–68) by Joseph-Louis Duc and Honoré Daumet.

Work

 * renovation of the Théâtre du Palais-Royal, with interior work by sculptor Jules Dalou, Paris, 1880
 * Basilique du Bois-Chenu, Domrémy-la-Pucelle (origin of Joan of Arc), begun 1881, consecrated 1896
 * Printemps department store renovation, Paris, with sculptor Henri Chapu, 1883
 * monument to industrialist Eugène Schneider, with sculptor Henri Chapu

English

 * Berry, J. Duncan. "From Historicism to Architectural Realism: On Some of Wagner's Sources," in: Harry F. Mallgrave (ed.), Otto Wagner: Reflections on the Raiment of Modernity (Santa Monica, 1993): 242-278. ISBN 0-89236-257-X
 * Hitchcock, Henry-Russell. Architecture: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, 4th ed. (Harmondsworth, 1977), 384. ISBN 0-300-05320-7
 * Mallgrave, Harry F. Modern Architectural Theory: A Historical Survey, 1673-1968 (Cambridge, 2005): 207. ISBN 0-521-79306-8
 * Middleton, Robin D. "Paul Sédille," in: Adolf K. Placzek (éd.), The Macmillan Encyclopedia of Architects (New York, 1982), 4: 20-21.

French

 * Bus, Charles du. "Deux aspects de l'art urbain," Gazette des beaux-arts, 4ème pér., 12 (1914): 368-90.
 * Encyclopdédie d'architecture, 3ème sér., 4 (1885): 1-35 + pls. 860f., 896f., 899, 919, 927f., 931, 941, 965, 981f., 992, 997f., 1004-6.
 * Hautecoeur, Louis. Histoire de l'architecture classique en France. La fin de l’architecture classique 1848-1900 (Paris, 1957), vol. 7: 377, 413, 447.
 * Lafenestre, Georges. "Les magasins du Printemps réédifiés par M. Paul Sédille," Gazette des beaux-arts, 2ème pér., 27 (1883): 239-53.
 * Lucas, Charles. Nécrologie: M. Paul Sédille," La construction moderne 15 (1900): 179-80.
 * Lucien, Étienne. "La vie et les ouvrages de Paul Sédille," L'Architecture 13 (1900): 305-8, 313-15.
 * Marrey, Bernard. Les grands magasins des origines à 1939 (Paris, 1979): 97-109. ISBN 2-7084-0045-2
 * Sully-Proudhomme, René François Armand. "Paul Sédille," Revue de l'art ancient et moderne 9 (1901): 77-84, 149-60.
 * Sully-Proudhomme, René François Armand. Paul Sédille (Paris, 1902).

German

 * Contag. "Der Neubau des 'Magasin au Printemps (sic)' in Paris," Deutsche Bauzeitung 20 (1886): 33f.
 * Hofmann, Albert. "Die französischen Architektur der Dritten Republik," Deutsche Bauzeitung 21 (1887), 38, 127.
 * Thieme-Becker 30: 422.