Robert de Cotte and the Perfection of Architecture in Eighteenth-Century France
After describing de Cotte's training and the professional context in which he worked, Neuman offers a thorough survey of de Cotte's output. For each commission, he recreates the actual design process, showing how de Cotte manipulated an accepted vocabulary of architectural forms to meet the patron's specific requirements. De Cotte's own drawings, many reproduced here for the first time, and quotations from a wide variety of contemporary writings vividly supplement the case histories. Beautifully illustrated, Neuman's much-needed book reveals de Cotte as an innovative and strikingly modern architect.
2. The Italian Sojourn
3. Drawings
4. The Palace
5. The Country House
6. The City: Paris
7. The Town House
8. The City: Provincial Capitals
9. The Church
10. The Bishop's Palace
11. The Monastery
Epilogue
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Illustration Acknowledgments
Index
Architecture: History of Architecture
History: European History
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