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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Moulin_RougeMoulin Rouge - Wikipedia

    In January 1903, the Moulin Rouge underwent renovation and improvement under the direction of Édouard Niermans, a prominent architect of the Belle Époque era, amongst other works he designed the brasserie Mollard, the Casino de Paris, the Folies Bergère in Paris, the Palace Hôtel in Ostend in Belgium, the rebuilding of the Hôtel du Palais ...

  2. Oct 8, 2020 · In 1903, the Moulin Rouge got a makeover from architect Édouard Niermans, who aimed to update the now 14-year-old venue to attract Paris's most stylish patrons. But 12 years later, in 1915, disaster struck when the building burned down.

    • Natasha Lavender
  3. Édouard-Jean Niermans, né le 30 mai 1859 à Enschede et mort le 19 octobre 1928 à Montlaur, Aude, Eduard Johan Niermans en néerlandais, est un célèbre architecte néerlandais de la Belle Époque, naturalisé Français en 1895. Il est le père de l'architecte Jean Niermans (1897-1989).

  4. It was Adolphe Willette, one of the major illustrators of the late nineteenth century who developed, between 1885 and 1889, the vocabulary of the anti-Semitic caricature in France, combining Christian anti-Semitism, anti-capitalism, and racial characterization in a nationalistic logic that pitted the hated figure of the ugly Jew against the ...

  5. Adolphe Léon Willette (30 July 1857 in Châlons-sur-Marne – 4 February 1926 in Paris) was a French painter, illustrator, caricaturist, and lithographer, as well as an architect of the famous Moulin Rouge cabaret.

  6. Moulin Rouge. Cabaret, opened in 1889. Built by Adolphe Leon Willette (1857-1926) and Edouard-Jean Niermans (1859-1928). Marked by the red windmill on its roof. Detail. Exterior. Pigalle district. RM CW8B1G – Moulin Rouge, French for Red Mill, is a cabaret in the Pigalle area of Paris, France.

  7. Architects: Adolphe Willette and Édouard-Jean Niermans; Architectural Style: Belle Époque; Capacity of the main hall: 850 people; Premiere: October 6, 1889; Number of Visitors per Year: 600,000

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