Inauguration 4 mars 1928 (≈ 1928)
Official ceremony of the monument.
22 février 2010
MH classification
MH classification 22 février 2010 (≈ 2010)
Inventory of Historical Monuments.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
2e quart XXe siècle
Construction period
Construction period 2e quart XXe siècle (≈ 2037)
Construction of the monument and urban development.
Heritage classified
The Monument to the dead in full with the urban developments made during its construction (placette around the monument, delimited to the south and to the west by the fences of the square, to the north and to the east by the border of cut stone inserted in the ground, staircase of access up from Tracastel street to the place of Petit-Puy, crypt) (cad. BH public domain not cadastre): inscription by order of 22 February 2010
Key figures
Gaston Le Bourgeois - Sculptor
Author of Art Deco elements.
Léon Le Bel - Architect
Designer of the memorial portal.
Origin and history
Grasse's monument to the dead of 1914-1918 was designed as a commemorative square-plan portal, supported by four pillars and covered with a roof in a building. This hybrid tempieto, combining ancient architecture and provençal motifs, was designed by the local architect Léon Le Bel, while the sculptor Gaston Le Bourgeois realized the artistic elements. The Art Deco decoration, visible on the capitals and the scabs, alternate combat scenes and representations of the daily life of the hairy in the trenches. The ensemble was inaugurated on 4 March 1928 after a complete urban redevelopment of the surrounding square.
The layout includes a square with gardeners, caladized floors and wrought iron grills, as well as a straight staircase linking the square to Tracastel Street. A crypt composed of two rooms, located under the square, completes the device. The monument, classified in total (including its surroundings and crypt) by decree of 22 February 2010, illustrates the memory of the post-war period, combining tribute to the soldiers and landscape integration into the urban fabric of the country.
The location of the monument, Place du Petit-Puy, marks the centre of an ambitious urban project, where the commemorative art dialogues with the public space. The stylistic influences — between classicism and modernity — reflect the artistic tensions between the two wars, while the warrior iconography recalls the lasting impact of the conflict on the French communes. Owned by the town of Grasse, the monument remains a strong symbol of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, anchored in its historical and geographical context.
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