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Au Siège de Sebastopol (Rue de la Monnaie from the Rue de Rivoli)

1865–66

Medium/Technique Photograph, albumen print from glass negative
Dimensions Image/Sheet: 27.1 x 26.8 cm (10 11/16 x 10 9/16 in.)
Mount: 33.2 x 31.9 cm (13 1/16 x 12 9/16 in.)
Mount: 60.2 x 41.4 cm (23 11/16 x 16 5/16 in.)
Credit Line Charles Amos Cummings Fund
Accession Number1980.217
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsEurope, Photography
ClassificationsPhotographs
Charles Marville is known for his photographs of Paris. He was named "photographer of the city of Paris" in 1862, and recorded the city both before and after Baron Haussmann's massive urban renewal projects of the 1860s. The visual drama that characterizes Marville's depiction of the rue de la Monnaie is typical of his photographs of old Paris. The converging lines of architecture, sky, and road highlight the tight narrowness of the street, an aspect of old Paris that would soon be swept away by Haussmann's wide boulevards. Signs and figures animate the surface of the corner building, contrasting with the empty street and the stillness of the delivery wagons waiting there.

Descriptionexhibited as 1865-66 in the Portraits and Architecture in 1985
InscriptionsWith Louvre blind stamp.
ProvenanceRobert Hershkowitz, London, England; purchased June 1980.