The French Style Fireplace

The French style fireplace is the most elegant in history, and the French influence on the English fireplace goes back to the first part of the 17th century. The architect Inigo Jones was greatly inspired by both French and Italian designs, and brought these together, along with other influences, to create beautiful fireplaces of his own. So impressed was Jones with these styles, he taught British artisans to fashion such fireplaces- in doing so, Jones left a legacy of some of the most beautifully ornate fireplaces in existence. Fine examples of these are found in the reproductions popular across America.

french-style-fireplaceThe influence of the French style fireplace could increasingly be seen in the latter part of the 17th century. Fireplace design continued to be dictated by architects and, in accordance with popular architecture, new styles were different from what had gone before. The Louis XV scrolls and curved lines became popular for a while, and again this style was very popular across America (and still is today).

This style quickly went out of fashion, and Christopher Wren became the next major influence on fireplace design. He built on the training provided by Jones to master craftsmen, and a complex mix of continental and English tastes began to emerge. The Queen Anne style was borne, becoming synonymous with the name of Christopher Wren.

Wren also liked fireplaces built across the corner of a room, an idea taken directly from the French. Examples of such fireplaces by Wren can be seen at Hampton Court Palace and at the Queens house at Greenwich. Wren had the honour of being made Director of Royal Building and thus was commissioned by King William and Queen Mary to design the new palace at Hampton Court. In the King’s drawing room, there is a beautifully simplistic French style corner fireplace. However, amongst the general public the corner fireplace attracted criticism because families could not gather around the hearth in the traditional way. 

In the early 18th century, the French style Louis XIV fireplace became popular in England for a while, before losing out to the extravagance of the Chippendale style. The Louis French – style fireplace that became popular in Europe and America during the 19th century mimicked the type of fireplaces popular during the reigns of Louis XIV, XV and XVI.

In reality, these replicas made by French architects and artisans in the Victorian era were much less ornate than the original Louis fireplaces. However, the Victorian Louis XV fireplace was much more graceful than the British fireplaces of the era – the French style fireplace was often made by Italian craftsmen, with the finishing being undertaken by French artisans. It is this workmanship that makes the Louis XV fireplace popular to this day.


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2 Responses to “The French Style Fireplace”

[...] fireplaces are among the most sought after designs. It was Inigo Jones who first brought the French classical style of fireplace to England in the form of ornate, decorative [...]

September 2nd, 2009 at 12:23 pm

[...] the early Victorian period, most French style fireplaces projected nine inches out from the wall. The front was flat with a wide rectangular opening, and [...]

September 29th, 2009 at 2:25 pm

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