This Symposium is organized in conjunction with the exhibition Charles Percier: Architecture and Design in an Age of Revolutions, on view from (November 18, 2016 to February 5, 2017). This Symposium brings together experts and scholars in the fields of Architecture, Design, Art History and History. This is the first large-scale exhibition to survey the magnificent range of projects undertaken by the French architect and designer from the end of the eighteenth to the beginning of the nineteenth century. Although largely remembered for his close collaboration with Pierre François Léonard Fontaine (1762–1853)—together they defined the Empire style and created the decorative program of Napoleon’s reign—Charles Percier’s (1764–1838) artistic style was unique, complex, and ever-evolving.

The exhibition breaks with the tradition of considering Percier and Fontaine together. This choice, shaped by the discovery of new documents relating to the production of the two partners, allows a better understanding of Percier’s multifaceted artistic practice. By focusing on his seminal works, the exhibition will demonstrate the diverse and extraordinary creations of an artist whose work brilliantly bridged ancien régime court culture and the industrial production of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.


Jeffrey L. Collins
Professor, Bard Graduate Center
Welcome


Jean-Philippe Garric
Curator, Charles Percier: Architecture and Design in an Age of Revolutions; Professor, History of Architecture, University of Paris I, Panthéon-Sorbonne
Charles Percier: Beyond the Antique Model


Iris Moon
Visiting Assistant Professor, School of Architecture, Pratt Institute
New Heads for Old Bodies: Percier’s Designs for the French Revolution


Ulrich Leben
Research Scholar and Visiting Professor, Bard Graduate Center
Charles Percier’s Vision of Antiquity


Darius Spieth
Professor, Art History, Louisiana State University
Percier and Piranesi


Jean-François Bédard
Associate Professor, School of Architecture, Syracuse University
Franks, Not Romans: Medieval Imagery and the Making of Imperial France


Response and Q&A
moderated by Jeffrey L. Collins, Professor, Bard Graduate Center


Organized by Bard Graduate Center Gallery, New York, in association with the château de Fontainebleau and the Réunion des musées nationaux-Grand Palais, Paris. Additional support for this exhibition is provided through the generosity of Bernard & Lisa Selz, Max Blumberg & Eduardo Araújo, and other donors.