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  1. 4 de may. de 2014 · Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris is curated by Sarah Kennel, Associate Curator of Photographs at the National Gallery of Art. The presentation of the exhibition in New York is organized by Jeff L. Rosenheim, Curator in Charge, and Doug Eklund, Curator, based on a curatorial program established by Malcolm Daniel, former Senior Curator, of the Metropolitan Museum’s Department of ...

  2. Charles Marville, photos de Paris avant Haussmann. Pendant le Second Empire, Paris connut sous l’égide de Napoléon III et du Préfet Haussmann les plus importants travaux de son histoire. Des transformations qui permettront à la capitale d’entrer dans l’ère moderne, et qui feront de Paris une référence mondiale en matière d ...

  3. 27 de dic. de 2013 · Cuando murió en 1879, a los 66 años, Charles François Bossu —artísticamente conocido por el seudónimo de Charles Marville (se había cambiado el apellido natal porque la palabra francesa ...

  4. Charles Marville, whose real name is Charles François Bossu, is an unknown photographer who was at the forefront of these transformations. Official Photographer of Napoleon III, he become in 1858 photographer of the city of Paris. His task was twofold: to preserve historical prints of destroyed neighborhoods, thus proving the benefit of those ...

  5. Charles Marville, the pseudonym of Charles François Bossu, was a French photographer, who mainly photographed architecture, landscapes and the urban environment. He used both paper and glass negatives. He is most well known for taking pictures of ancient Parisian quarters before they were destroyed and rebuilt under "Haussmannization", Baron ...

  6. Charles Marville Album du Vieux Paris 1865–1868. Commissioned in 1864 by Paris’ agency on historic works (under the aegis of urban planner Georges-Eugène Haussmann), Marville made approximately 425 photographs of the narrow streets and crumbling buildings of the premodern city at the very moment they were threatened by demolition.

  7. Charles Marville et les chantiers de restauration. De nombreux chantiers de restauration s’ouvrent à cette époque, ainsi qu’en témoigne l’œuvre photographique de Charles Marville (1816-v. 1879), dont le nom est resté étroitement lié aux aménagements et transformations de Paris durant la seconde moitié du XIX e siècle. Ce « photographe de la Ville de Paris » s’est également ...