Ghislain-Joseph Henry Explained

Ghislain-Joseph Henry (1754-1820) was an architect, garden designer and topiarist, notable for his work for Louis XVI of France, the Holy Roman Emperor, Napoleon I and William I of the Netherlands.

Life

He was born in Dinant (then in the Principality of Liège) in 1754 into a family which originated in Profondeville (Namur). He won first prize for architecture in the Clementine Competition at the Academy of Saint Luke in 1779 and studied at the Academy of Saint Luke in Rome. In 1803 he became one of the founder members of the Société de peinture, sculpture et architecture de Bruxelles and in 1816 he joined the academic council of the Académie royale des beaux-arts de Bruxelles.[1]

Works

Architecture

Topiary

Notes and References

  1. Académie de Bruxelles, deux siècles d'architecture, Bruxelles, Archives d'architecture moderne, 1989, pp. 35, 38, 79 (note 74), 162, 166, 167, 169, 170, 172, 202.
  2. François de Pierpont, « Le château de Duras », in Le Parchemin, September–October 2009, p. 353.
  3. Anne and Paul van Ypersele de Strihou, Laeken, résidence impériale et royale, Bruxelles, 1970, p. 27
  4. Xavier Duquenne, Le parc de Wespelaar, le jardin anglais en Belgique au XVIII siecle, Bruxelles 2001, pp. 43-55.