GYPSUM PLASTER

 

Gypsum plaster has been used for thousands of years but remains a surprisingly modern material.

Gypse en étoile d'Angervillers (Essonne). Collections du Musée du Plâtre.

Gypsum

In geological terms, gypsum is a hydrous calcium sulfate, an evaporite mineral; its chemical formula is CaSO4 2H2O. Gypsum deposits tell the history of the Paris sedimentary basin, which has shaped the region's landscape. The gypsum quarry on the slopes of Cormeilles, roughly 10 kilometres north-west of Paris, had been a landmark for a century, but is currently being reclaimed, as mining continues underground.

 

Le gypse de Cormeilles-en-Parisis (in French)

Purest Gypsum (in English)

The Cormeilles Quarry Since 2007. The final years of open-cast mining (in English)

 

Le cycle du Plâtre.

From Gypsum to Plaster, and Gypsum Products

After quarrying, the gypsum is crushed and fed to kilns. The gypsum is dehydrated by heating to about 130°C, to drive off the chemically combined water, and then ground to a fine powder, like plaster of Paris.

 

Gypsum plaster, in powder form, is ready to use by adding water. Its multiple uses include applications in building construction, decoration, casting and molding, agriculture, and water treatment. Industrial plasters and building plasters may include chemical additives, and are used to produce gypsum board, gypsum blocks and rendering materials.

Plaquiste. Archives Placoplatre.

Building Construction, Decoration and Architectural Ornaments

Plasterers' skills, techniques and tools were traditionally handed down from one generation to another. While gypsum board (drywall) was introduced in the United States in the late 19th century and gained in popularity through the first half of the 20th century, French building construction, with lath and plaster walls and ceilings, remained largely unchanged until 1960. The introduction of plasters with longer working times, prefabrication, and mechanical (projection) plastering have changed how plaster is used in construction.

Patrimoine des enduits au plâtre en Île-de-France

This series (in French) examines plaster-rendered facades in the Greater Paris region

- Newsletter n° 1 janvier 2017 

- Newsletter n° 2 mai 2017 

- Newsletter n° 3 septembre 2017

Newsletter n° 4 janvier 2018 

- Newsletter n° 5 mai 2018 

- Newsletter n° 6 février 2019

 

 

Demi-fronton en staff, chef-d'oeuvre de Meilleur Ouvrier de France (MOF) de Frédéric Pirot, 2004. Collections du Musée du Plâtre.

"Petit guide pour reconnaître et restaurer une façade en plâtre"

(Short guide on how to recognize and restore a gypsum plaster facade)

Produced by LRMH (Laboratoire de Recherche des Monuments Historiques) / French Ministry of Culture

This booklet reviews the history of gypsum plaster in the greater Paris area, how to recognize these facades, typical disorders, and how to restore them. (The cover shows the historical schoolhouse that was the first home of the museum in Cormeilles.)

Download guide

 

"Plâtre. Sols et couvrements intérieurs. Du XIIIe au XIXe siècle"

(Plaster. Floors and interior renders. From the 13th to the 19th century)

Author: Christelle Inizan. Editions du Patrimoine, 2017. Download order form

La Main Trois Yeux, sculpture de Georges Boulogne, 1953. Collections du Musée du Plâtre.

Sculpture

Sculptors have used gypsum plaster since ancient times; one of the most traditional casting techniques involves plaster molds that are broken after the casting hardens (the waste mold method). Plaster can also be sculpted directly by carving or modeling, or used with other media.

 

- Le décor de stuc dans l'art islamique (VIIIe-XXe siècle) (in French)

- Le cheval blanc de François Ier (1540-1543) (in French)

- Sompuosités baroques en Allemagne du Sud (in French)

- Historical plaster casts from the Louvre collection in Versailles (in English)

- La poterie de la Montagne à Saint-Honoré-lès-Bains (Nièvre) (in French)

- Le monument funéraire de Pierre Mocquot à Aix-en-Othe (1850) (in French)

- A Londres, des moulages en plâtre du XIXe siècle (in French)

- Yvonne Duttile, sculptrice (1883-1979) (in French)

 

- La République et ses masques. Culte du grand homme et culture matérielle (de la Ie à la Ve République)

Authors: Jonathan Barbier and Bruno Bertherat (with the gracious permission of the authors), Cahiers Jaurès 2016/1 (no. 219-220), Société d'Etudes Jaurésiennes, 2016, pp. 119-143 (in French)

 

- La dame au chapeau. La photographie des femmes mortes en France à l'époque de Bertillon

par Bruno Bertherat (with the gracious permission of the author), Corps, 2013/1, CNRS Editions, 2013, pp. 97-106 (in French)

THE SURREALIST SCULPTOR GEORGES BOULOGNE 

Planche du carrier-plâtrier, encyclopédie de Diderot et d'Alembert, XVIIIe siècle.

Gypsum plaster has been used across the Mediterranean Basin since ancient times.

There is ample evidence in France dating back to Gallo-Roman times—twenty centuries ago—including in the Paris region and specifically what is now Cormeilles-en-Parisis.

 

"Arts et techniques pour fabriquer du plâtre" (Arts and technology for making plaster)

by Vincent Farion, in Une Antiquité moderne, co-published by the French Academy in Rome and the Louvre Museum, Officina Libraria, 2019, pp. 204-206 (in French)

 

"Le plâtre changé en or, l'or changé en plâtre. Les mots et les images, symboles de richesse et de blancheur"

(Plaster into gold, gold into plaster. Words and images, symbols of weath and whiteness)

by Vincent Farion, in L'or blanc: de la métaphore des sens à la réalité environnementale et économique, supplement no. 15 to Cahier de l'ASER, 2020, pp. 37-43 (in French)

 

Gypsum Plaster in History

Panneau de la société des Gypses et Plâtres de France - L'Ours Blanc à Marseille, années 1930. Collections du Musée du Plâtre.

Gypsum in France

The Paris basin accounts for over 60% of gypsum deposits in France, and many locations—including Montmartre in Paris—continue to show traces of what was once a major industry.

There are also vestiges of gypsum activity in other regions of France—including Provence, the Pyrenees, Burgundy, the foothills of the Alps.  


- Des fours à plâtre dans Paris (1765-1800) (in French)

- Les ports au plâtre. Le commerce du plâtre sur la Seine et l'Oise au XIXe siècle (in French)
- La grève des plâtrières en 1909 (in French)

- Placoplatre et autres histoires industrielles - on sale at the museum (in French)

- Placoplatre et autres histoires industrielles - introduction (in French)

- Les plâtrières du Val-d'Oise à travers les siècles - préface (in French)

- Les carrières à Taverny (Val-d'Oise) - préface (in French)

- La plâtrière d'Armoy (Haute-Savoie) (in French)

- La Renarde - A Webseries (in French)

This family saga in 12 episodes takes us through time and space. The story begins in the 19th century and continues to the present day in the countryside outside of Paris, the City of Light, Germany and the Swiss Jura. The Musée du Plâtre is a partner in this series, which features the participation of Vincent Farion and Jacques Hantraye, who shed light on the history of plaster in the Seine-et-Marne area southeast of Paris.

- A l'ouest de la butte de Cormeilles-en-Parisis : les carrières souterraines de Montigny - La tuilerie de Cormeilles - La butte de la Tuile ou les carrières à plâtre de Montigny et d'Herblay (in French)

 

Learn more (in French):

Les Articles du Musée du Plâtre (published by the Museum, download):