Victor Horta - The Belgian architect Victor Horta was the initiator and leading
exponent of Art nouveau in Belgium. In Brussels Victor Horta built a
great many private houses as well as public buildings, which are among
the most important examples of Art nouveau. Born the son of a shoemaker
in Ghent in 1861, Victor Horta began studying architecture at the
Académie des Beaux-Arts in Ghent; from 1874 until 1877 he attended the
Royal Atheneum there. In 1878 Victor Horta went to Paris, where he
worked until 1880 in the studio of the interior decorator Jules
Debuyson.
Victor Horta would later write in his memoirs: "My stay in
Paris, the walks I took, the monuments and museums I visited, awakened
my artistic sensitivity. No academic education could have inspired me so
strongly and lastingly as "reading" monuments." In 1881 Victor Horta
moved to Brussels and finished his studies there at the Académie des
Beaux-Arts. From 1881 Victor Horta also worked in the practice of the
Neo-Classical architect Alphonse Balat. Victor Horta was particularly
inspired by the French architect and theorist Eugène Viollet-le-Duc. On
the one hand, Viollet-le-Duc clamored for protecting and restoring
medieval buildings; on the other he was a passionate advocate of the new
engineering in architecture and was committed to the use of the new
building materials, particularly cast iron, and modern building
techniques. In "Entretiens sur l'architecture" (published 1863 and 1872)
Viollet-le-Duc drew a comparison between the Gothic skeletal method of
construction and 19th-century cast-iron construction, emphasizing the
close relationship between them.
From 1892 Victor Horta designed
several houses and public buildings in Brussels, for which he used cast
iron for structural and decorative reasons. In 1892-93 Hôtel Tassel was
built, with an interior featuring exposed cast-iron construction and
glass elements. Further, it was notable for the richness of its
decoration, shaped by organic forms and soft lines. In 1893 Victor Horta
built Maison Autrique, which was followed in 1895-96 by Maison
Winssinger and, from 1895-1900, Hôtel Eetvelde, buildings Victor Horta
conceived as total works of art in the Art nouveau style.
Between
1896 and1899 Victor Horta designed Maison du Peuple, the headquarters of
the Belgian Socialist party, with a façade entirely constructed of
cast-iron and glass - the first of its kind in Brussels. In 1900-01 "À
l'Innovation", a department store, was built, for which Victor Horta
also used the Art nouveau style. From 1912 Victor Horta taught at the
Académie des Beaux-Arts in Brussels and was director of it from 1913
until 1915 . Between 1916 and 1919 Victor Horta lived in London and the
United States of America. In subsequent years, Victor Horta distanced
himself from Art nouveau, now designing buildings in a more
Neo-Classical formal language featuring straight lines, as exexmplifed
by the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, built between 1922 and 1928
Tassel House - 1893-1895
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Street facade, present condition |
Detail of facade, archival photo |
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Ground floor and mezzanine plans |
Main floor and second floor plans |
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Vestibule |
plan of entry and vestibule showing mosaic floors |
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Bottom of staircase |
Detail of wall decoration |
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model |
longitudinal section |
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