November 12, 2008

Raymond Isidore, La maison de Picassiette / Picassiette's House

picture from a postcard

Located in Chartres, a town in northern France known for its centuries old cathedral, the house of Raymond Isidore (1900-1964), surnamed Picassiette, is among the best known mosaic-decorated sites in the world.

In France it ranks as one of the three top art environments, the other ones being facteur Cheval's Palais Idéal and the sculpted rocks by Abbe Fouré.

Life and works

Isidore mainly had simple jobs. As a young man, living with his parents, he worked as a moulder in foundries. In the early 1930s he was employed by a tramway company and around 1935 he became employed by the city of Chartres as a cantonnier, in which capacity he worked as a sweeper at the local graveyard.  

In 1924 Isidore married Adrienne Dousset (1889-1986) who by that time already had three children.

In 1929 he bought a plot of land along what currently is the Rue de Répos and in 1930 he began building a house where he would live with his wife and the children.

The story of the decorations begins in 1938, when Isidore made a walk in the neighbourhood and happened to see some pieces of broken pottery, which drew his attention and inspired him to make mosaics from broken kitchen ware.

The next twenty years or so, Raymond Isidore would never stop decorating his house with mosaics, finding his inspirations in dreams he had at night.

These efforts resulted in a fully decorated site. Both the exterior and the interior of the house have been fully covered with mosaics, not just the walls, but also the furniture, the beds, the stove....

picture courtesy of Jessica Strauss

Raymond Isidore died September 7, 1964, on the eve of his 64th birthday. His wife Adrienne continued to live in the house until 1979 when she moved to a house for the elderly. She died in 1986. Both Raymond and Adrienne haven been buried in a family grave in the local Saint-Chéron graveyard.

In the 1950s interest in the site grew

In the 1950s in France interest in sites like the one made by Isidore began to grow, mainly in circles of the avantgarde artworld. Picasso paid a visit to the site in 1954 and the photographer Robert Doisneau (1912-1994), who in the 1950s became a famous photographer of the Parisian art scene and the city's street life, in 1956 made pictures of the site.

The photographer Gilles Ehrman also visited Isidore and his 1962 photo-book Les inspirés et leurs demeures might mark the beginning of recognition of sites like the one by Isidore in official French circles In 1969 the French minister of culture Malraux would classify facteur Cheval's Palais Idéal as a historical monument.

The site currently is a museum 

In 1981 the city of Chartres became owner of the house. In 1983 La Maison de Picassiette became a historical monument and currently it is part of the Chartres Museum of Fine Arts.

A digital guided tour

In this post this art environment will not be described in full detail, because the internet already has a very good guided tour on the website The Joy of Shards. The video of France 3 TV in the documentation also gives a tour of the site

What about "picassiette'?

Isidore got his nickname Picassiete by shortening Picasso de l'assiette, a nickname that probably was first used by a journalist who wrote about him in a local journal. The French word assiette means plate.

In the world of those who love or make mosaic pique assiette is a generic name for mosaic products made with found material.

Selected documentation
* Clovis and Claude Prévost, Raymond Isidore, dit Picassiette, de Chartres. Ed du Chène, 1978
* Maarten Kloos, Le paradis terrestre. -107 p. Paros (Encre), 1979, an early publication about the site
Paul Fuks"Les rêves de porcelaine de Picassiette", in: Imaginaire & Inconscient 1/2002 (no 5) , p. 17-29 
The site appears in Jarvis Cocker's Journeys into the Outside (1999, on YouTube in 2012, see my post of August 23, 2012)
* Article on SPACES website (2012) with pictures made in 1988 by Seymour Rosen
* Presentation of the site on Facebook, edited by a descendant by marriage of Isidore. Another descendant published a website named Maison Picassiette
* Website Habitants-paysagistes (Lille Art Museum, from March 2018 on) has a variety of photographs by Francis David (1983-1992), l'Aracine (1981-1996) and Louise Tournay (1970-1995) and documentary panels from René Escard's documentation (1970-1995)
* Article about the site by Sonia Terhzaz on her website Cartographie des Rocamberlus (environments d'art singulier), reporting the visit she paid in June 2014. This article includes comments by Raymond Isidore on his creation

Some videos

* Video by Louis Coutard (June 2014, 5.49", YouTube)


* Video (2018, 4'21", YouTube) by France 3 television 


first published November 2008, last revised June 2023

Raymond Isidore
La maison de Picassiette
22 rue de Répos
28000 Chartres, dept Eure-et-Loire, region Centre-Val de Loire, France
in 2023 open for the public from 15/3-15/11,
Wednesday-Saturday 10-18 hrs 
Sunday 14-18 hrs
see the official website

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