Jacques Alleman
Jacques Alleman , born the September 12th 1882 in Bordeaux, dead the October 30th 1945) with Nœux-the-Mines, is a Architecte French.
Biography
François-Jacques Laussus Alleman is originating in Bordeaux, it is the older brother of Jeanne Alleman (1885-1938), known as Jean Balde, and the great nephew of the Gascon scholar Jean-François Bladé (1827-1900). In 1908, it enters to the school of the Art schools of Bordeaux for its studies of architect. Mobilized during the war 14-18 with the 418e regiment of infantry, he knows the battle fields of Ypres, Verdun, the Sum and Aisne. He settles after the war with Béthune, then in Nœux them Mines. He marries Germaine Lafon, of which he will have two children. In 1931, it is established in Lille. Taken refuge to Bordeaux during the second world war, it returns to Nœux-the-Mines to die there little of time afterwards.
Works
Author of the rebuilding of Béthune, he is the architect of the memorials of the Great War with Lille: war memorial of the Rihour place, monument with the victims of the 18 Bridges, monument with Leon Trulin, monument Foch (with the sculptor Edgar Boutry), monument with the carrier pigeons (sculptor Alexandre Descatoire). He is the author with the sculptrice Yvonne Serruys of the monument with Albert Samain. He builds the Institute Diderot (today Baggio college), boulevard of the Defenders of 1934 to 1938 and joins Emile Dubuisson to take part in the contest of the hospital city of Lille. Marked initially by regionalism, he affirms himself like an architect Art déco, with a taste pronounced for a symbolism probably related to his membership of the Franc-maçonnerie.
| Random links: | Cycle merchants of weapons | Metropolis of Chişinău and all Moldavie | Canton of Conca-in Oro | César Alexandre Debelle | The Farm of the animals (film, 1954) | Art_en_pierre_coréen |