Charles L'Eplattenier
(Neuchatel 1874 - Les Cotes du Doubes 1946)
Charles L'Eplattenier was an important figure in the Swiss artistic
scene at the turn of the century and in the early years of the 20th
Century. He is considered one of Switzerland's most important art nouveau artists.
L'Eplattenier studied studied drawing in Neuchatel and after the
death of his father went to stay with an aunt in Budapest where
he studied at the School of Decorative Arts. He then went on to
Paris where he studied painting, sculpture and architecture in the
Ecole Nationale des Beaux Arts in the studio of Luc-Olivier Merson.
At the age of 23, he returned Switzerland to become professor at
the lEcole dart of La Chaux-de-Fonds. He turned this
institution into an important art center. As gifted a teacher as
he was an artist, L'Eplattenier was also known for helping his students
find their true artistic path and for introducing his students to
the arts and crafts movement and to such influences as William Morris
and John Ruskin.
At the Ecole d'Art, L'Eplattenier became a mentor
to the young Charles Edoard Jeanneret (Who later adopted the pseudonym Le Corbusier), who had enrolled at the school at the age
of 15. It was L'Eplattenier who encouraged Le Corbusier to pursue a career as an architect.
L'Eplattenier's style of art nouveau has been dubbed the "style sapin" for the recurrent motifs of pines and other decorative natural elements. He frequently sought inspiration in the open air, in the Swiss countryside. In 1946, after at the end of a day's hike, he tragically fell to his death from one of the rocky promonitories along the river Doubs, near Brenets.