Cauchie House
The Cauchie House is a historic town house in Brussels, Belgium. It was designed by the architect, painter, and designer, and built in 1905, in Art Nouveau style. Its façade is remarkable for its allegorical sgraffito decoration.
The house is located at 5, rue des Francs/Frankenstraat in the municipality of Etterbeek, next to the Parc du Cinquantenaire/Jubelpark.
Background
was sixteen when he began his architectural studies at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp. Very soon afterwards, he enrolled at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Brussels, where he studied painting and the sgraffito technique, and followed courses in decorative painting between 1893 and 1898. From 1895, whilst still pursuing his studies, Cauchie started to work for a living. Apart from his own house, only three houses built by Cauchie are known: two others in Brussels and one at Duinbergen, next to Knokke-Heist, in West Flanders, Belgium. As Cauchie was more of a decorator than an architect, he specialised in designing sgraffito for architecture.Cauchie met his future wife in the Royal Academy of Fine Arts. Carolina 'Lina' Voet achieved a very good level in painting, enabling her to teach drawing and painting privately. They married in 1905 and decided to build a house on the plot of land Cauchie bought at 5, rue des Francs/Frankenstraat, next to the Parc du Cinquantenaire/Jubelpark in Brussels. He designed the front of the house with the intention of advertising and selling their work: sgraffito for him and art teaching for her. As the house was easily seen from the neighbouring roads, it drew the attention of passers-by and demonstrated their know-how.
Building
At the very centre of the façade, Cauchie drew the words "Par Nous — Pour Nous". The house was designed, from the very beginning, as a joint work intended for private use. Cauchie did the drawings for the house but worked together with his wife to design and decorate their home-workshop. Cauchie and his wife filled the house with their multiple works of artThe Cauchie House is a good example of the application of the principle of a unified work of art or Gesamtkunstwerk in architecture. Cauchie and his wife wanted that the distinction between the main art forms and the minor art forms disappeared to become part of the global œuvre.