École Estienne (Paris) – 120 years of design training

École Estienne
Ecole Estienne

L’école Estienne is the traditional name of the École supérieure des arts et industries graphiques (ESAIG) (Graduate School of Arts and Printing Industry). The property is located in the 13th Paris district of Boulevard Auguste-Blanqui, at 18, not far from the Butte-aux-Cailles.

History

In 1887, anthropologist and linguist Abel Hovelacque proposed that the City of Paris should set up a municipal arts and professional printing school for the industry. In November 1889, 108 students opened their school in temporary premises on Rue Vauquelin.

In honour of the Estienne family, the school was named after a famous family of printers from the 16th century, including Henri Estienne (elder), Robert Estienne and Charles Estienne. Its mission was to address the poor printing and book-making qualifications and standards, covering theoretical and practical aspects.

Architect Menjot Dammartin designed the main building, and it was built in 1896. The machine shop (1200 m2) was made by the workshops of Gustave Eiffel in Levallois-Perret. The premises were opened by the President of France, Félix Faure, in July 1896. It is located at 18 Boulevard Auguste-Blanqui in Paris’s 13th arrondissement, not far from the Butte-aux-Cailles.

Departments

Departments and qualifications offered;

Sources

Accueil. École Estienne. http://www.ecole-estienne.paris/.

Wikipedia contributors. (2020, December 9). École Estienne. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 04:45, January 14, 2021, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=%C3%89cole_Estienne&oldid=993171645

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  • Maurice Dufrêne (1876 – 1955), French Decorative Artist

    Maurice Dufrêne (1876 – 1955), French Decorative Artist

    Maurice Dufrêne (1876–1955) was a French decorative artist who headed the Maîtrise workshop of the Galeries Lafayette department store. He designed many different types of decorative art, including metalwork, ceramics, glass, and fabric. His designs from 1910 onward are austere and neoclassical, reminiscent of the Louis XVI style.Read More →

  • Art Nouveau: The French Aesthetic (hardcover)

    Art Nouveau: The French Aesthetic (hardcover)

    This book’s stature is rare. It took five years to compile 624 pages and 740 pictures about Art Nouveau in France. Arwas examines the movement’s development in Nancy and Paris using never-before-published pictures. The comprehensive, witty narrative extends over architecture, haute couture, and the role of women in Art Nouveau with a look at Sarah…

  • Suzanne Guiguichon (1901 – 1985) French Furniture Designer

    Suzanne Guiguichon (1901 – 1985) French Furniture Designer

    Suzanne Guiguichon was a French furniture designer and decorator. She was born and worked in Paris. Since 1929 she worked as a designer with Maurice Dufrene at the Galeries Lafayette design studio La Maitrise in Paris. Most of the furniture, clocks, lighting, fabrics, rugs, accessories Guiguichon designed anonymously.Read More →

  • Alessi PSJS Juicy Salif Citrus Squeezer (Design Classic)

    Alessi PSJS Juicy Salif Citrus Squeezer (Design Classic)

    Alessi PSJS Juicy Salif Citrus Squeezer designed by Philippe Starck On a sunny day in the spring of 1989, PhilippeRead More →

  • Pierre Paulin (1927 – 2009) French furniture designer

    Pierre Paulin (1927 – 2009) French furniture designer

    He was active in research for the government-sponsored Mobilier International. His first plastic object was the 1953 Chair 157 in polyester, ABS, and elastomers produced by Artifort of Maastricht. Around 1955, he was one of the first to work in elasticised fabrics for Thonet and subsequently for Artifort.Read More →

  • Richard Peduzzi (b.1943) French Set and Furniture Designer

    Richard Peduzzi (b.1943) French Set and Furniture Designer

    Richard Peduzzi (b.1943) is a French painter and scenic furniture designer. Education He studied drawing and sculpture under Charles Auffet.Read More →

  • SS. Normandie Art Deco Palace

    SS. Normandie Art Deco Palace

    The ship, its decor, and furniture reflected everything stylish, sophisticated, forward-thinking, and French when it was launched in the age of grand style, a decade after the successful exposition of modern design at the 1925 Paris exhibition.Read More →

  • 40+ French Designers in the applied and decorative arts

    40+ French Designers in the applied and decorative arts

    The following posts are a selection of French Designers that I have posted about over the last year. French design styles incorporate the new and the old. It is bold and sophisticated. It is attention to detail, whether a brooch, a clock, fabric, or glass. Read More →

  • Jean Schlumberger (1907 – 1987) French jewellery designer

    Jean Schlumberger (1907 – 1987) French jewellery designer

    Jean Schlumberger (1907–1987), one of the most accomplished artists of the twentieth century, produced objects of unrivalled beauty. He was a man of exquisite taste, a jeweller who created extraordinary jewelled statements with a feeling of depth and life. Read More →

  • Martine Bedin (b.1957) radical architecture and design

    Martine Bedin (b.1957) radical architecture and design

    Bedin was one of the founders of the avant-garde Memphis group in Milan in 1981. Also, she has worked as an architect, industrial designer and professor. Her work is held in many important museums and private collections. Bedin’s aesthetic is typically colourful and self-consciously kitschy.Read More →

  • Jan and Joel Martel (1896 – 1966) twin brothers and French sculptors

    Jan and Joel Martel (1896 – 1966) twin brothers and French sculptors

    Jan and Joel Martel (1896 – 1966) were twin brothers and French sculptors. They were born in Nantes and active in Paris. Cement, glass, steel, mirrors, ceramics, lacquers, and synthetics were all used in their projects.Read More →

  • Jean Patou (1880 – 1936) 🎩 Fashion Designer

    Jean Patou (1880 – 1936) 🎩 Fashion Designer

    One of Patou’s most famous customers was the French tennis champion Suzanne Lenglen, whom he dressed both on and off the court. This lean and active young woman epitomised the 1920s “new woman.” She created a furore in 1921 when she wore Patou’s knee-length pleated skirt, which revealed much of her legs when she ran.…

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