Jean-Baptiste Vallin de la Mothe

Jean-Baptiste Michel Vallin de la Mothe (1729 May 7, 1800) was a French architect whose major career was spent in St. Petersburg, where he became court architect to Catherine II. His students were Ivan Starov and Vasily Bazhenov.[1]

Jean-Baptiste Michel Vallin de la Mothe
Born1729
Died(1800-05-07)May 7, 1800
NationalityFrench
OccupationArchitect
BuildingsNew Holland Island, Imperial Academy of Arts, Great Gostiny Dvor

Biography

Early Years and Education

He was born in Angoulême. Vallin de la Mothe graduated in 1750 in Paris, soon with the help of his cousin Jacques-François Blondel he entered the French Academy in Rome. According to his letters of that period, Vallin de la Mothe had a great interest to Andrea Palladio and Vincenzo Scamozzi. Beginning in 1750, Vallin de la Mothe spent two years studying at the French Academy in Rome, though not as an official pensionnaire. He graduated with distinction and was elected as a member of Academies of Arts in Florence and Bologna.[2]

On his return to Paris he was one of the architects who presented projects for Place Lous XV.[3][1]

Work in Russia

In 1759, Vallin de la Mothe accepted an offer extended through the Russian ambassador Aleksei Petrovich Bestuzhev-Ryumin, prompted by Blondel, to create Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg and teach architecture there.[4] De la Mothe's high reputation in professional circles is supported with the fact, that he was also recommended by Jacques-Germain Soufflot.[2]

In St. Petersburg, Vallin de la Mothe adjusted Blondel's designs for a pet project of Shuvalov, the Imperial Academy of Arts (1765–72),[5] in the form of a large open square with a circular central court. As a professor at the Academy, Vallin de la Mothe taught many Russian architects who would themselves be prominent one day including Ivan Starov and Vasili Bazhenov; under the impetus of Vallin de la Mothe, the promising young Russians were sent to Paris to apprentice with Charles De Wailly,[6] thus setting a distinctively French stamp on Russian neoclassicism.

It is known that Vallin also redesigned interiors of the Winter Palace to Catherine II in 1762-1763.[7]

Catherine the Great had been so impressed by his work at the Academy[8] that she commissioned him to build an extension to her Winter Palace, which sits across the Neva River from the Academy. This would be Vallin de la Mothe's most famous work.[9] The structure he built, known as the Small Hermitage, became the home to Catherine's art collection. This collection would eventually grow to be one of the world's largest— today Russia's Hermitage Museum holds over 3,000,000 pieces of art, and hundreds of thousands of tourists visit Vallin de la Mothe's Small Hermitage, along with the rest of the complex, every year.

From 1761 to 1767, he pursued a number of other projects. He designed St. Petersburg's market hall, Gostiny Dvor on Nevsky Prospekt (the main street of St. Petersburg), the palaces of Kirill Razumovsky, Ivan Chernyshyov, the House of Yusupov's Moika Palace (where Grigori Rasputin was murdered[10]), and the New Holland Arch. In 1766 he officially became the court architect.

He began, but did not complete, work on the Catholic Church of St. Catherine. Work on the church was completed by Antonio Rinaldi.[1]

Return to France

In 1775 Vallin de la Mothe left Russia and came back to France. He resided in Lyon, where he designed and constructed his own house. In 1782 due to poverty and serious illness he was forced to move back to his childhood city Angoulême. The great architect died there on the 7th of May, 1800.[11]

In France he created several urban buildings.[1] The neoclassical hôtel particulier he designed in the 1780s for Louis Thomas de Bardines survives at 79 rue de Beaulieu.[12]

Notes

  1. Palmer 2020, p. 303.
  2. Shvidkovsky 2007, p. 232.
  3. David Watkin, A History of Western Architecture 2005:421.
  4. Saint Petersburg Encyclopedia Archived 2007-12-06 at the Wayback Machine.
  5. In this project he had the assistance of Russian architects A. F. Kokorinov and Y. M. Felten. (St Petersburg Encyclopedia).
  6. Watkin 2005, eo. loc..
  7. Dixon 2009, p. 135-136.
  8. George Heard Hamilton, The Art and Architecture of Russia 1983:292.
  9. Massie 2011, p. 524.
  10. "Yusupov Palace". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2012-07-29. Retrieved on June 10, 2008.
  11. Shuysky 1997, p. 73-105.
  12. Hôtel de Bardines Archived 2007-07-08 at the Wayback Machine.

Sources

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