Hôtel d'Ollone
72 rue Bressigny 49000 Angers
- Maine-et-Loire
- Pays de la Loire
Located on Bressigny Street, the Hôtel d'Ollone is one of the five buildings of the TALM Angers School of Art and Design.
Originally known as the Hôtel de la Boullaye, this 1760 building was built by Alexis-Joseph de Bernabé, seigneur of Boullaye. It would later belong, in 1905, to the Countess d'Ollone from the inheritance of Viscount Ernest de la Planche de Ruillé. The name of the countess will then be associated with the name of the hotel as we know it today: the Hotel d'Ollone. It was only after the Second World War that it was acquired by the city to serve as the regional school of Fine Arts.
The master builder who built the hotel remains unknown. The building located in the city centre of Angers evokes the Louis XVI style.
The Hotel d'Ollone is divided into two architectural elements: the castle and the half-moon. It is on the first floor of the castle, in the Thézé room, that we will find the exhibition room with an area of 150 square meters.
Etiquetas
Villes et Pays d'art et d'histoire, Édifice scolaire et éducatif, Château, hôtel urbain, palais, manoir, Site patrimonial remarquable
Alain Chudeau