Eglise Saint-Joseph
Square Joseph Lenglier, 56300, Pontivy
From the beginning of the XIXth century, a religious building appears on different projects for the napoleonic district of Pontivy. It was nevertheless necessary to wait for the Second Empire so that a church goes out of earth. Launched thanks to the financial assistance promised by Napoleon III during its passage in Pontivy in 1858, the construction site(work) took place between 1863 and 1869\. It is in the Parisian architect Marcellin-Emmanuel Varcollier, recommended by the princess Bacciochi, cousin of Napoleon III recently installed(settled) in Colpo, that they owe the plans of this neo-Gothic church the architectural sculpture of which was realised by the Pontivyen Joseph Le Goff. The early exhaustion of the imperial subsidy left the incomplete church: the arrow surmounting(overcoming) the tower - bell tower and the sacristy, between others, were never realised. In 1985, the labour union(syndicate) between local councils for the tourist development of the canton of Pontivy, supported by the regional preservation of historic monuments, threw(launched) an international competition(help) for the creation of contemporary stained-glass windows. Sixty-seven teams existent from all Europe answered it. Compound(Made up) of painters Patrick Ramette and Catherine Viollet, of masters(teachers)-glaziers Sylvie Gaudin and Giles Rousvoal, and Duchemin et Gaudin workshops, equips prize-winner realised the current stained-glass windows between 1991 and 1994 on the compulsory theme of four elements. Thanks to this construction site(work), the church San José de Pontivy appears among the big(great) French historic monuments today having participated in the renewal of the art of the contemporary stained-glass window from 1980s.
Tags
Édifice religieux & Monument historique
libre de droits