At the request of the lord and abbot of Caunes, the Genoese sculptor Sormano reopened the marble quarries in the 1610s. Six Italian masters moved to Caunes and sent Languedoc marble to Carrara, at the same time they were transporting white marble from Italy. Around 1658 a French architect, Jean Baux, was in charge of furnishing the carved parts of the south-west churches, alone, or in association with the Italian marble workers. The extent of the orders for the royal buildings favoured the sculptor from Caunes, causing the arrival of many marble workers, from sculptors to manual labourers. Archival documents emphasize the privileged position of the Caunes and Félines quarries, from specifying the means of transport and the techniques, of an...
International audienceThe geographical situation of Troyes, in the alluvial Seine plain hewn from Tu...
In the seventeenth century, marble was regarded as a living material, offering the attractions of my...
Considering the development of the construction in the late Middle Ages, and the preference for the ...
The difficulty of procuring statuary marble was a recurrent problem for sculpture, except obviously ...
By 1610, on abbot Jean Alibert’s initiative, Italian sculptors come to exploit the marble quarries o...
From the sixteenth century, marble sculptors in Genoa formed a separate corporation that defended th...
The marble quarry in Trets, in the heart of Provence, has the distinction of being operated by just ...
International audienceEven less well known than the Caunes-Minervois marble quarries are those at Ro...
While arising from common production systems and involving the same actors, marble is distinguished ...
While the wealth of the small number of private archives cannot be denied, those familiar with publi...
International audienceSeries of white marble capitals constitute significant markers for valuation o...
International audienceThe stone of the Bois des Lens is a white and fine-grained limestone extracted...
The architect, the sculptor, the marble mason and a few mantel pieces at Fontainebleau in the 1730’s...
Le XIXe siècle voit la marbrerie se mécaniser et le transfert des techniques se réaliser dans ces mé...
International audienceIn 1985, a very considerable marble warehouse was discovered in the excavation...
International audienceThe geographical situation of Troyes, in the alluvial Seine plain hewn from Tu...
In the seventeenth century, marble was regarded as a living material, offering the attractions of my...
Considering the development of the construction in the late Middle Ages, and the preference for the ...
The difficulty of procuring statuary marble was a recurrent problem for sculpture, except obviously ...
By 1610, on abbot Jean Alibert’s initiative, Italian sculptors come to exploit the marble quarries o...
From the sixteenth century, marble sculptors in Genoa formed a separate corporation that defended th...
The marble quarry in Trets, in the heart of Provence, has the distinction of being operated by just ...
International audienceEven less well known than the Caunes-Minervois marble quarries are those at Ro...
While arising from common production systems and involving the same actors, marble is distinguished ...
While the wealth of the small number of private archives cannot be denied, those familiar with publi...
International audienceSeries of white marble capitals constitute significant markers for valuation o...
International audienceThe stone of the Bois des Lens is a white and fine-grained limestone extracted...
The architect, the sculptor, the marble mason and a few mantel pieces at Fontainebleau in the 1730’s...
Le XIXe siècle voit la marbrerie se mécaniser et le transfert des techniques se réaliser dans ces mé...
International audienceIn 1985, a very considerable marble warehouse was discovered in the excavation...
International audienceThe geographical situation of Troyes, in the alluvial Seine plain hewn from Tu...
In the seventeenth century, marble was regarded as a living material, offering the attractions of my...
Considering the development of the construction in the late Middle Ages, and the preference for the ...