Sauvegarde de l'art Français (association)
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Sauvegarde de l'art Français (association)
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Sauvegarde de l'art Français (association)
Sauvegarde de l'art francais (Association)
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Sauvegarde de l'art francais (Association)
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Biographical History
The organization Sauvegarde de l'art Français was founded in Paris in 1925 to protect, conserve and restore France's artistic heritage of art and monuments. The duc de Trévise, Édouard Mortier, was the President of the Society; he organized a show and sale in the spring of 1924 to benefit what was then a personal project. Soon after that fundraiser, Mortier toured cities in the United States with the intent of raising additional money to benefit his cause. In 1925, after hearing Mortier speak about the organization, the Boston Committee of Sauvegarde de l'art Français, sometimes called La Sauvegarde de l'art Français, was formed. The Boston Committee brought together the leading artistic patrons of Boston, who raised money for the restoration, and eventual purchase, of the thirteenth century walled village of Larressingle, located in present day Gascony. Larressingle is spelled in multiple ways in the records of the Boston committee, often with only one r, or one s. Today the accepted spelling is "Larressingle." Larressingle is one of the smallest medieval fortresses in Europe, which in 1920 was a crumbling, neglected ruin. Jean-Jacques Haffner, head of the Department of Architecture at Harvard College, made frequent trips to,France, reporting from there to the Boston Committee on the goings on at the Paris Sauvegarde de l'art Français, and the state of the repairs at Larressingle. By 1930, Sauvegarde de l'art Français had committees in Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, Madison, and Minneapolis, as well as in cities all over France. The Boston Committee ceased to exist in early 1938 after it completed a successful purchase and restoration of the village of Larressingle. Sauvegarde de l'art Français exists today as a private restoration subsidy; it focuses mainly on the repair and restoration of old churches built prior to 1800. Larressingle is currently a popular tourist destination of the Pyrenees.
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