Construction of house 1836 (≈ 1836)
Initial building in Tarbes.
vers 1860
Installation of a bank
Installation of a bank vers 1860 (≈ 1860)
Conversion into a bank.
1882
Repurchase by Estévenet
Repurchase by Estévenet 1882 (≈ 1882)
Léon Pierre Estévenet founded his bank there.
vers 1920
Adding Japonizing Figures
Adding Japonizing Figures vers 1920 (≈ 1920)
Female painting in a soup.
début XXe siècle
Painting achievements
Painting achievements début XXe siècle (≈ 2004)
Joseph Cardeillac painted the murals.
14 août 2008
Protection of paints
Protection of paints 14 août 2008 (≈ 2008)
Registration as a Historic Monument.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The wall paintings located in the attic of the house, as well as their support and roofing of the building housing them (Box AW 55): inscription by order of 14 August 2008
Key figures
Léon Pierre Estévenet - Banker and owner
Buy the house back in 1882.
Joseph Cardeillac - Painter and cartoonist
Author of murals.
Origin and history
The Semi House, located in Tarbes in the Hautes-Pyrénées, was built in 1836. This building, initially a private residence, became the seat of a bank around 1860. In 1882 Léon Pierre Estévenet, banker, acquired it to set up his own financial institution. Today, this place is distinguished by its history linked to the local banking and artistic world.
At the beginning of the 20th century, Joseph Cardeillac, descendant of Léon Pierre Estévenet and talented cartoonist, made a series of wall paintings directly on plaster in the attic of the house. These works, of great iconographic richness, represent various scenes: sports (automobile races, fencing), worldly (sea baths, libertin scenes), as well as portraits of Tarbese personalities of the time. They offer a valuable sociological testimony about the local bourgeoisie.
One of the soup pieces stands out by female figures with japonizing influences, probably added around 1920. These paintings, together with their support and the roof sheltering them, were protected by a decree of 14 August 2008 as Historical Monuments. The house, now owned by the municipality, illustrates the mixture of architectural, banking and artistic heritage.
The exact address of the Maison de la Semi is 29 rue Georges-Clemenceau in Tarbes. Although its GPS location is considered mediocre (note of 5/10), it remains an emblematic place of the city, classified under the code Insee 65440. The paintings, by their style and subject, reflect the aspirations and lifestyle of the Tarbese elite at the turn of the 20th century.
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