Jean Prouvé follow artist
doors from the Grand Casino at Royan, pair
doors from the Grand Casino at Royan, pair
France, 1951
corrugated and oxidized aluminum sheet, steel, ash 91½ h × 47 w × 2 d in (232 × 119 × 5 cm)
Doors are reversible to reveal wood or metal side.
The Grand Casino was an exemplary building among the modern architecture erected during the reconstruction of Royan after World War II. Claude Ferret, a student of Le Corbusier, and chief planner for Royan, designed the building. Following Le Corbusier, Ferret used concrete to create rational and sculptural architecture. Prouve's contribution to the Grand Casino was a series of corrugated aluminum doors, integrated into the avenue façade. The repeated folds of sheet aluminum created a visually active surface against the modern concrete structure.
literature: Jean Prouve, Coley, pg. 66 cites this project
Jean Prouve Complete Works Volume 3: 1944-1954, pg. 283 for discussion of the voile grille system in Royan