2014-01-02

Exhibition dates: 29th September 2013 – 5th January 2014

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The French photographer Charles Marville (1813-1879) is rapidly becoming a favourite of mine. In fact, I have just ordered Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris by Sarah Kennel from Amazon – a book that comes highly recommended – and I am eagerly awaiting its arrival.

Charles Marville “is primarily known for documenting the transformation of Paris from a medieval city to a modern one, through a series of images of old neighborhoods lost due to urban renewal… Marville’s earliest works were salted paper prints made from paper negatives – soft, high-contrast images not far removed in feeling from the pioneering, somewhat primitive photographs of William Henry Fox Talbot. As photographic technology advanced, Marville shifted to glass negatives that allowed far more visual precision, particularly in the architectural and streetscape images that compose the largest portion of the National Gallery of Art’s retrospective. By the late 1870s, shortly before his death, Marville’s compositions began to presage the more modernist approaches Alfred Stieglitz would pursue just a few years later. (At one point, Marville even experimented with abstracted cloud images, decades before Stieglitz’s famous “equivalents.”) (Text by Louis Jacobson. “Reviewed: Charles Marbille at the National Gallery of Art,” on the Washington City Newspaper blog, posted 22nd October 2013)

Marville can be seen as the precursor to Eugène Atget (1857-1927). Atget would have been in his twenties when Marville was in the last few years of his life. It is interesting to speculate whether the two ever met? (and if they did what they would have talked about!) Atget would have been aware of the older photographers’ work, work that has been criticised for its lack of social consciousness and artistic feeling.

“Comparing Atget’s work with that of his best-known predecessor, Charles Marville (1816-1879), demonstrates another of Atget’s artistic contributions. Marville had been commissioned to make a comprehensive documentation of the vast districts of old housing that were to be demolished as part of Napoleon III’s plan to transform Paris into a modern capital. Marville’s photographs do not linger over any particular building, warm to its charm or embrace its artistic qualities. Instead (perhaps because these buildings were slated for destruction anyway), Marville chose a position from which he could see straight to the end of even the most narrow, winding street, enabling him to photograph the maximum number of structures with one shot.” (Text by Gerald M. Panter. “Atget in Historical Perspective”)

This is to denigrate the work of Marville. His photographs possess more subtly than Atget’s and they sing a different song. To me, Marville’s photographs are like a Bach fugue while Atget’s photographs are a Mozart sonata. Both have different resonances, no less valuable one from the other. It is as if Atget looked at the work of Marville and thought: how can I do this my way, in my own voice – and he then proceeded to “turn up the volume” – by changing the angle and perspective of the camera, by moving horse and cart into more prominent positions, by focusing on details and ghosts. But Marville is no less a master than Atget. You only have to look at the photographs to realise what great sensitivity to subject matter he possessed, what a unique voice this artist had.

Look at the amazing construction of the picture plane in numerous images in this posting. The wall that blocks the way in Impasse de l’Essai from the Horse Market (c. 1868, below) and the pictures elegiac atmosphere, tensioned by the post mimicking the tree at the left hand side and the threatening, dark, brooding forms of both trees overhanging the rooftops of the houses. The three photographs The Bièvre River (fifth arrondissement) (2 images) and Banks of the Bièvre River at the Bottom of the rue des Gobelins (all 1862, below) where the artist leads the eye of the viewer into the image using water, then partially blocks the line of sight into the distance by barrels and posts, shadows and reflections, at the same time limiting the sky to a small section so that the viewer’s eyes have some escape route out of the image. The last image Bièvre River at the Bottom of the rue des Gobelins is almost Cezanne-like in it’s flattening and fracturing of the image plane into modernist shapes. Atget could never have taken photographs like these. They are true masterpieces.

The last five images of city streets in the posting are also illuminating. While they are more frontal than many of Atget’s street photographs, with a longer vista and vanishing point, there is something about them that adds an indelible serenity to the scene. Maybe it’s the foreshortened walls lingering into the distance, the carts, the light, the shadows. Look at the very last photograph, Impasse de la Bouteille (de la rue Montorgeuil) (1865-1868, below) and notice the wonderful two vanishing points and the immense darkness of the intervening wall as it pushes its way into the image, the blackness of this intervention. Incredible.

As John Szarkowski has observed, “In the wet-plate days of Atget’s great predecessor Charles Marville photographed the streets of Old Paris, street by street. In those old streets that still existed a generation later, Atget repeated the work building by building, sometimes door by door, sometimes door knocker by door knocker. He reworked the ore with a finer screen, and sifted out a different precious metal.” (John Szarkowski. Eugène Atget. Museum of Modern Art, 2000, p.15)

Both Marville and Atget are precious metals. For that we are eternally grateful.

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Dr Marcus Bunyan for the Art Blart blog

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Many thankx to the National Gallery of Art, Washington for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

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Charles Marville
Gardens of the Bagatelle under Construction
1858-1862

Albumenized salted paper print from collodion negative

Image: 26 x 36 cm (10 1/4 x 14 3/16 in.)

Paula and Robert Hershkowitz

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Charles Marville
Marché aux chevaux (Horse Market) (fifth arrondissement)
c. 1867

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 26.2 x 36.8 cm (10 5/16 x 14 1/2 in.)

The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

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Charles Marville
Avenue du Commandeur (de la rue d’Alésia) (fourteenth arrondissement)
1877-1878

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 23 x 36.1 cm (9 1/16 x 14 3/16 in.)

Musée Carnavalet, Paris

© Musée Carnavalet / Roger-Viollet

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Charles Marville
Impasse de l’Essai (du marché aux chevaux) (Impasse de l’Essai from the Horse Market) (fifth arrondissement)
c. 1868

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 24.5 x 36.5 cm (9 5/8 x 14 3/8 in.)

Ville de Paris – Bibliothèque de l’Hôtel de Ville (BHdV)

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Charles Marville
Interior of Les Halles Centrales
1874

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 31.8 x 39.2 cm (12 1/2 x 15 7/16 in.)

The AIA/AAF Collection, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress, Washington D.C.

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Charles Marville
The Bièvre River (fifth arrondissement)
c. 1862

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 26.67 x 37.47 cm (10 1/2 x 14 3/4 in.)

Joy of Giving Something, Inc.

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Charles Marville
The Bièvre River (fifth arrondissement)
c. 1862

Albumen print from a collodion negative

Image: 27.8 x 37.6 cm (10 15/16 x 14 13/16 in.)

Lent by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Fund, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 1988

Image © The Metropolitan Museum of Art

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Charles Marville
Bords de la Bièvre (au bas de la rue des Gobelins) (Banks of the Bièvre River at the Bottom of the rue des Gobelins) (fifth arrondissement)
c. 1862

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 27.5 x 36.8 cm (10 13/16 x 14 1/2 in.)

Musée Carnavalet, Paris

© Musée Carnavalet / Roger-Viollet

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Charles Marville
Percement de l’avenue de l’Opéra (Construction of the avenue de l’Opéra)
December 1876

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 25.9 x 36.4 cm (10 3/16 x 14 5/16 in.)

Musée Carnavalet, Paris

© Musée Carnavalet / Roger-Viollet

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Charles Marville
Haut de la rue Champlain (vue prise à droit) (Top of the rue Champlain) (View to the Right) (twentieth arrondissement)
1877-1878

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 26 x 36.6 cm (10 1/4 x 14 7/16 in.)

Musée Carnavalet, Paris

© Charles Marville / Musée Carnavalet / Roger-Viollet

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Charles Marville
Urinoir (système Jennings) plateau de l’Ambigu (Urinal, Jennings System, plateau de l’Ambigu)
1876

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 26.7 X 36.4 cm (10 1/2 X 14 5/16 in.)

Musée Carnavalet, Paris

© Musée Carnavalet / Roger-Viollet

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Charles Marville
Treasury of Reims Cathedral
1854

Salted paper print from paper negative

23.1 x 34.5 cm (9 1/8 x 13 9/16 in.)

Private Collection

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Charles Marville
Sky Study, Paris
1856-1857

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 16.7 x 20.6 cm (6 9/16 x 8 1/8 in.)

Lent by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Fund, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 1987

Image © The Metropolitan Museum of Art

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Charles Marville
Cloud Study, Paris
1856-1857

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 15.4 x 25.7 cm (6 1/16 x 10 1/8 in.)

Sheet: 31 x 43.4 cm (12 3/16 x 17 1/16 in.)

Wilson Centre for Photography, London

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“The first exhibition in the United States and the very first scholarly catalogue on the accomplished 19th-century French photographer Charles Marville will explore the beauty, variety, and historical poignancy of Marville’s art. On view at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, from September 29, 2013, through January 5, 2014, Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris will include 99 photographs and three albums that represent the artist’s entire career, from his exquisite city scenes and landscape studies made across Europe in the early 1850s to his compelling photographs of Paris both before and after many of its medieval streets were razed to make way for the broad boulevards, parks, and monumental buildings we have come to associate with the City of Light. The accompanying exhibition catalogue will present recently discovered, groundbreaking scholarship informing Marville’s art and his biography.

“Although his photographs of Paris on the brink of modernity are widely hailed as among the most accomplished ever made of that city, Marville himself has long remained an enigma to art historians,” said Earl A. Powell III, director, National Gallery of Art. “We are thrilled to present this new look at the art and life of Marville and are deeply grateful to lenders, both public and private, for making this landmark show possible.”

Forty-one of the 102 works presented in the exhibition are on loan from the Musée Carnavalet, Paris.  Conservation and preparation of the loans from the Musée Carnavalet has been undertaken by the Atelier de Restauration et de Conservation des Photographies de la Ville de Paris (ARCP).

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Recent Discoveries

Marville has long remained a mystery partly because documents that would shed light on his biography were thought to have disappeared in a fire that consumed Paris’ city hall in 1871. The whereabouts of other documentation was simply unknown. However, new research has helped curator Sarah Kennel and exhibition researcher Daniel Catan reconstruct Marville’s personal and professional biography.

The son of a tailor and laundress, Charles-François Bossu was born in Paris 1813. In a double act of self-invention, he jettisoned his given name (bossu means hunchback in French) around 1832, at the moment he became an artist. He embarked upon a career as an illustrator in the early 1830s but turned to the young discipline of photography in 1850. Although he continued to be known as Marville until his death in 1879, he never formally changed his name, which is the reason many of the legal documents pertaining to his life have gone unnoticed for decades. The exhibition catalogue establishes Marville’s biography, including his parentage and his relationship with a lifelong companion, and uncovers many significant details that illuminate the evolution and circumstances of his career.

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The Exhibition and Artist’s Background

A talented and prolific artist lauded for his rigorously composed, beautifully detailed prints, Marville was commissioned in the early 1860s to record the city of Paris in transition. He soon became known as the official photographer of Paris and produced one of the earliest photographic series documenting urbanization. He continues to be recognized as one of the most accomplished photographers in the history of the medium.

Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris offers an overview of the artist’s photographic career, beginning with a compelling series of intimate self-portraits and portraits of friends and colleagues that provide a fascinating window into Marville’s personal life and professional ties, and serve as an introduction to the exhibition. Starting in 1850, Marville traveled throughout France and Germany, using the paper negative process with great skill to create beautiful landscapes, cityscapes, studies of sculpture, and striking architectural photographs. Many of these works were included in albums produced by the pioneering publisher Louis-Désiré Blanquart-Evrard. The quantity and quality of the photographs used by the publisher serve as both a testament to Marville’s skill and an indication that his training as an illustrator prepared him exceptionally well for this new pictorial enterprise of photographic documentation.

In the mid-1850s, Marville adopted the collodion negative process and undertook a series of sky and cloud studies, made from the rooftop of his Parisian studio. More rapid and sensitive than the paper negative process, the collodion negative process enabled the photographer to capture delicate, luminous cloud formations on the city’s horizon and made him one of the first artists successfully to photograph clouds. At the same time, Marville expanded his practice by honing in on two lucrative areas: reproductions of works of art and architectural photographs. He excelled at both and assumed the title and related privileges of photographer to the Louvre while he also documented building and renovation projects in Paris and the provinces for prominent French architects, including Eugène Viollet-le-Duc.

In 1858, Marville was commissioned by the city of Paris to photograph the newly refurbished Bois de Boulogne, a royal park on the edge of Paris that had been transformed under the emperor Napoleon III into a site of bourgeois leisure and pleasure. Arguably his first important body of work that was conceived and executed as a systematic series, the Bois de Boulogne series would influence his best-known work, the Old Paris photographs. Commissioned by Paris’ agency on historic works (under the aegis of urban planner Georges-Eugène Baron Haussmann) in the early 1860s, Marville made more than 425 photographs of the narrow streets and crumbling buildings of the premodern city at the very moment they were threatened by demolition. Known as the Old Paris album, the photographs are captivating for their seamless integration of artistic sensibility and intense devotion to maximum visual clarity. In many cases they serve as the only visual record of sites that have long since vanished.

The exhibition closes with an exploration of the emergence of modern Paris through Marville’s photographs. Even before completing the Old Paris series, Marville began to photograph the city that was coming into being, from massive construction projects, renovated churches, and broad boulevards to a host of modern conveniences, such as the elegant new gas lamps and the poetically named vespasiennes (public urinals) that cemented Paris’ reputation in the 1860s as the most modern city in the world. Marville also explored the city’s edges, where desolate stretches of half-finished construction suggest the physical displacements and psychic costs of modernization. Sharp-edged, beautifully detailed, and brilliantly composed, Marville’s photographs of the French capital as at once glamorous and alienating do not simply document change but in their very form shape the visual rhetoric of modern Paris.”

Press release from the National Gallery of Art website

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Charles Marville
South Portal, Chartres Cathedral
1854

Salted paper print from paper negative

Image: 21.5 x 15.5 cm (8 7/16 x 6 1/8 in.)

Lent by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Purchase, Jennifer and Joseph Duke Gift and The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Fund, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 2000

Image © The Metropolitan Museum of Art

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Charles Marville
Cathédrale de Chartres, Grandes Figures des pilastres du portail septentrional (Chartres Cathedral, Columnar Figures, Northern Portal)
1854

Salted paper print from paper negative

Image: 36 x 25.6 cm (14 3/16 x 10 1/16 in.)

The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift of Paul F. Walter

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Charles Marville
Charles Delahaye

1855-1856

Salted paper print from paper (or glass?) negative

Image: 21.6 × 15.9 cm (8 1/2 × 6 1/4 in.)

Lent by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Purchase, W. Bruce and Delaney H. Lundberg and Christian Keesee Charitable Trust Gifts, 2011

Image © The Metropolitan Museum of Art

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Charles Marville
Self-Portrait at a Window, February 20, 1851

1851

salted paper print from paper negative

image: 14.29 x 11.4 cm (5 5/8 x 4 1/2 in.)

support: 32.2 x 24.5 cm (12 11/16 x 9 5/8 in.)

mat: 53 x 40.5 cm (20 7/8 x 15 15/16 in.)

Musée d’Orsay, Paris

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Charles Marville
Self-Portrait
1861

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 23.5 x 18.3 cm (9 1/4 x 7 3/16 in.)

Collection Debuisson

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Charles Marville
Rue de la Bûcherie, from the cul de sac Saint-Ambroise (fifth arrondissement)
1866-1868

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 32 x 27.1 cm (12 5/8 x 10 11/16 in.)

National Gallery of Art, Washington, Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation through Robert and Joyce Menschel

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Charles Marville
Rue Saint-Jacques (fifth arrondissement)
1865-1866

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 30.8 x 27 cm (12 1/8 x 10 5/8 in.)

National Gallery of Art, Washington, Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation through Robert and Joyce Menschel

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Charles Marville
Cour Saint-Guillaume (ninth arrondissement)
1866-1867

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 34.2 x 27.2 cm (13 7/16 x 10 11/16 in.)

Lent by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gilman Collection, Purchase, Alfred Stieglitz Society Gifts, 2005

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Charles Marville
Passage Saint-Guillaume (vers la rue Richelieu) (first arrondissement)
1863-1865

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 31.91 x 27.62 cm (12 9/16 x 10 7/8 in.)

Joy of Giving Something, Inc.

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Charles Marville
Rue Ollivier (vers la rue Saint-Georges) (ninth arrondissement)
c. 1868

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 28.6 x 27.6 cm (11 1/4 x 10 7/8 in.)

Joy of Giving Something, Inc.

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Charles Marville
Impasse de la Bouteille (de la rue Montorgeuil) (second arrondissement)
1865-1868

Albumen print from collodion negative

Image: 35.9 x 27.7 cm (14 1/8 x 10 7/8 in.)

Musée Carnavalet, Paris

© Musée Carnavalet / Roger-Viollet

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National Gallery of Art

National Mall between 3rd and 7th Streets

Constitution Avenue NW, Washington

Opening hours:

Monday – Saturday 1000 am – 5.00 pm

Sunday 11.00 am – 6.00 pm

National Gallery of Art website

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Filed under: beauty, black and white photography, documentary photography, Eugene Atget, exhibition, existence, gallery website, landscape, light, memory, Paris, photographic series, photography, portrait, reality, space, time, works on paper Tagged: Albumen print from collodion negative, Avenue du Commandeur, Avenue du Commandeur (de la rue d'Alésia), Banks of the Bièvre River at the Bottom of the rue des Gobelins, Baron Haussmann, Bois de Boulogne, Bords de la Bièvre (au bas de la rue des Gobelins), Cathédrale de Chartres, Cathédrale de Chartres Grandes Figures des pilastres du portail septentrional, Charles Delahaye, Charles Marville, Charles Marville and Eugène Atget, Charles Marville Avenue du Commandeur, Charles Marville Banks of the Bièvre River at the Bottom of the rue des Gobelins, Charles Marville Bords de la Bièvre, Charles Marville Bords de la Bièvre (au bas de la rue des Gobelins), Charles Marville Cathédrale de Chartres, Charles Marville Charles Delahaye, Charles Marville Chartres Cathedral Columnar Figures, Charles Marville Cloud Study Paris, Charles Marville Construction of the avenue de l'Opéra, Charles Marville Cour Saint-Guillaume, Charles Marville Gardens of the Bagatelle under Construction, Charles Marville Haut de la rue Champlain, Charles Marville Haut de la rue Champlain (vue prise à droit), Charles Marville Impasse de l'Essai, Charles Marville Impasse de l'Essai (du marché aux chevaux), Charles Marville Impasse de la Bouteille, Charles Marville Impasse de la Bouteille (de la rue Montorgeuil), Charles Marville Interior of Les Halles Centrales, Charles Marville Marché aux chevaux, Charles Marville Marché aux chevaux (Horse Market), Charles Marville Paris, Charles Marville Passage Saint-Guillaume, Charles Marville Passage Saint-Guillaume (vers la rue Richelieu), Charles Marville Percement de l'avenue de l'Opéra, Charles Marville Rue de la Bûcherie, Charles Marville Rue de la Bûcherie from the cul de sac Saint-Ambroise, Charles Marville Rue Ollivier, Charles Marville Rue Ollivier (vers la rue Saint-Georges), Charles Marville Rue Saint-Jacques, Charles Marville Self-Portrait 1861, Charles Marville Self-Portrait at a Window, Charles Marville Sky Study Paris, Charles Marville South Portal Chartres Cathedral, Charles Marville The Bièvre River (fifth arrondissement), Charles Marville Top of the rue Champlain, Charles Marville Treasury of Reims Cathedral, Charles Marville Urinoir (système Jennings) plateau de l'Ambigu, Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris, Charles-François Bossu, Chartres Cathedral, Chartres Cathedral Columnar Figures, City of Light, Cloud Study Paris, Construction of the avenue de l'Opéra, Cour Saint-Guillaume, Cour Saint-Guillaume (ninth arrondissement), early Paris photographs, emperor Napoleon III, Eugène Atget and Charles Marville, Eugène Atget and Charles Marville Paris, Eugène Atget Charles Marville, Eugène Atget Paris, french artist, French photographer, French photography, Gardens of the Bagatelle under Construction, Georges-Eugène Baron Haussmann, Haut de la rue Champlain, Haut de la rue Champlain (vue prise à droit), Impasse de l'Essai (du marché aux chevaux), Impasse de l'Essai from the Horse Market, Impasse de la Bouteille, Impasse de la Bouteille (de la rue Montorgeuil), Interior of Les Halles Centrales, John Szarkowski, John Szarkowski Eugène Atget, Louis-Désiré Blanquart-Evrard, Marché aux chevaux (Horse Market), Marville and Atget, Marville Old Paris, Marville Old Paris photographs, Napoleon III, Old Paris album, Paris, Paris photographs, Passage Saint-Guillaume, Passage Saint-Guillaume (vers la rue Richelieu), Percement de l'avenue de l'Opéra, photography of Paris, Rue de la Bûcherie from the cul de sac Saint-Ambroise, Rue Ollivier (vers la rue Saint-Georges), salted paper print from paper negative, Self-Portrait at a Window, Sky Study Paris, South Portal Chartres Cathedral, The Bièvre River (fifth arrondissement), Top of the rue Champlain, Treasury of Reims Cathedral, Urinal Jennings System plateau de l'Ambigu, Urinoir (système Jennings) plateau de l'Ambigu, vespasiennes

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