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Portrait of Adolphe Menjou and Evelyn Brent from A Night of Mystery by Eugene Robert Richee.

History of the French Revolution by Adolphe Thiers 1845.

From Thier’s Historical Works Series. Translated from the German by Thomas Redhead.

Published by A.Fullerton, London, Edinburgh & Dublin. Four volumes,. half leather binding, this volume 790 pages 26cm x 17.5cm.

 

Santinely Adolphe, Pastor_Chaplain (white trousers) mingling among out-patients waiting at initial clinic to be seen (probably by Dr. Alf Borge) Ejeda Hospital patients' families' housing in background SW Madagascar 1966

 

Caleb and Connie Quanbeck served as missionaries in Madagascar from 1926-1972 for the Lutheran Free Church and The American Lutheran Church.

Caleb Quanbeck slides, 1940s-1980s.

ELCA Archives

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Maker: André Adolphe Eugène Disdéri (1819-1889)

Born: France

Active: France

Medium: albumen print

Size: 2 1/4 in x 4 in

Location:

 

Object No. 2021.580b

Shelf: B-10

 

Publication: Alex Novak, 19th Century French Master Photographers: Life Into Art, Vintage Works, Ltd, Chalfont, 2017, pg 162

 

Other Collections:

 

Provenance: Vintage Works

Rank: 133

 

Notes: TBAL

 

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For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE

Steel engraving from History of the French Revolution by Adolphe Thiers 1845.

From Thier’s Historical Works Series. Translated from the German by Thomas Redhead.

Published by A.Fullerton, London, Edinburgh & Dublin. Four volumes,. half leather binding, this volume 790 pages 26cm x 17.5cm.

 

Maker: Louis-Adolph Humbert de Molard (1800-1874)

Born: France

Active: France

Medium: modern gelatin silver print

Size: 7" x 9 1/2"

Location:

 

Object No. 2016.897

Shelf: E-25

 

Publication: Andre Jammes and Eugenia Parry Janis, The Art of the French Calotype, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1983, pg 192

 

Other Collections: SFP

 

Provenance: Texbraun Galerie

 

Notes: Baron Louis Adolphe Humbert de Molard, born in Paris on October 30, 1800 and died on March 17, 1874, was a French pioneer of photography. From the beginning of the 1840s, Baron Humbert de Molard became interested in the first photographic techniques. He is one of those wealthy amateurs who were passionate about this emerging art. After the death of his first wife, he remarried in 1843 with Henriette Renée Patu, miniaturist designer and lithographer, who owned land in Lagny-sur-Marne. From 1843 to 1850, he produced a series of daguerreotypes but gradually favored the calotype technique , which he experimented with from 1844. He was partly trained by his friend Hippolyte Bayard . He used other techniques, such as albumen printing and wet collodion . He came into contact with Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor to try to improve certain processes and then became the defender of the development techniques promoted by Gustave Le Gray. His productions have remarkable pictorial qualities and reveal a great mastery of the technical stages (lighting, emulsion, development). He staged activities related to the peasant world, as well as several gender figures, helped by his steward and model named Louis Dodier. In 1854, he was a founding member of the Société française de photographie and sought to promote various techniques of development on paper from negatives and resigned in 1864 for health reasons. He published his research between 1851 and 1866 in the journal La Lumière, which was for a time the bulletin of the Société héliographique de Paris. (Source: Wikipedia)

 

To view our archive organized by themes and subjects, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS

 

For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE

Portrait of Adolphe Menjou and Evelyn Brent from A Night of Mystery by Eugene Robert Richee.

Signet Classics CD1, 1959. Cover art by Milton Glaser?

Portrait of Adolphe Menjou and Evelyn Brent from A Night of Mystery by Eugene Robert Richee.

Obj. No. 2008.100

William-Adolphe Bouguereau (French, 1825-1905)

Battle of the Centaurs and the Lapithae (Bataille des Centaures contre les Lapithes), 1852

Oil on canvas

49"H x 68⅝"W

124.46 cm x 174.31 cm

Image must be credited with the following collection and photo credit lines:

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond. Arthur and Margaret Glasgow Fund.

Photo: Travis Fullerton © Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

 

The bow of the "Adolphe" is still visible on the Shipwreck Walk, on the northern breakwater at Stockton. The "Adolphe" was wrecked on the notorious Oyster Bank in September 1904 - no lives were lost. The mast in the foreground belongs to the "Regent Murray" (wrecked in 1899).

The modern ship entering port is the "Ocean Wind", registered in Port Vila, Vanuatu.

 

1904 photo from Cultural Collections, University of Newcastle.

Boulevard Adolphe Max - Adolphe Maxlaan

© Jean-Paul Remy - 2020

Maker: André Adolphe Eugène Disdéri (1819-1889)

Born: France

Active: France

Medium: albumen print

Size: 2 1/4 in x 4 in

Location:

 

Object No. 2021.580a

Shelf: B-10

 

Publication: Alex Novak, 19th Century French Master Photographers: Life Into Art, Vintage Works, Ltd, Chalfont, 2017, pg 162

 

Other Collections:

 

Provenance: Vintage Works

Rank: 133

 

Notes: TBAL

 

To view our archive organized by Collections, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS

 

For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE

By Pascal Adolphe Jean Dagnan Bouveret (1852 - 1929)

French

1886

Oil on canvas

Item number: 31.132.34

Base militaire

Saint-Adolphe d'Howard (Quebec), Canada

 

Ancienne base militaire canadienne du Lac-St-Denis à Saint-Adolphe-d'Howard débuta ses opérations au cours des années 1950. Sa mission: surveiller l'espace aérien du sud-ouest du Québec et du Nord-Est de l'Ontario. Cette base était opérée par le Canada dans le cadre du NORAD, à savoir le Commandement de la défense aérospatiale de l'Amérique du Nord (North American Aerospace Defense Command, ou NORAD).

 

Une organisation américano-canadienne dont la mission est la surveillance de l'espace aérien nord-américain

 

La base militaire de Saint-Adolphe faisait partie de la ligne Pinetree (Pinetree Line) qui était constituée d'un réseau de 33 stations radars sous juridiction canado-américaine s’échelonnant le long du 49e parallèle afin de protéger l'Amérique du Nord d'éventuelles attaques aériennes en provenance de l'URSS.

 

Alors que les nouvelles technologies rendent les installations caduques, elles furent fermées en 1987.

  

Norad Military Base

Saint-Adolphe d'Howard (Quebec), Canada

 

Canadian military base located in St-Adolphe-d'Howard began its operations in 1950. Its mission: monitor the airspace in southwestern Quebec and northeastern Ontario.

True vestige of the Cold War between the Western bloc and the Eastern bloc, the military base was operated by Canada as part of the NORAD organization (namely North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD. It is an US-Canadian organization whose mission is to monitor the North American airspace.

 

This military base located in Saint-Adolphe was part of the Pinetree Line which consisted of a network of 33 radar stations under Canada-US jurisdiction ranging along the 49th parallel to protect North America from possible air attacks from the USSR.

 

While new technologies made these facilities obsolete, it was closed in 1987.

  

Texte Source: www.urbexplayground.com

  

Maker: Louis-Adolph Humbert de Molard (1800-1874)

Born: France

Active: France

Medium: modern gelatin silver print

Size: 7" x 9 1/2"

Location:

 

Object No. 2016.890

Shelf: E-25

 

Publication:

 

Other Collections:

 

Provenance: Texbraun Galerie

 

Notes: Baron Louis Adolphe Humbert de Molard, born in Paris on October 30, 1800 and died on March 17, 1874, was a French pioneer of photography. From the beginning of the 1840s, Baron Humbert de Molard became interested in the first photographic techniques. He is one of those wealthy amateurs who were passionate about this emerging art. After the death of his first wife, he remarried in 1843 with Henriette Renée Patu, miniaturist designer and lithographer, who owned land in Lagny-sur-Marne. From 1843 to 1850, he produced a series of daguerreotypes but gradually favored the calotype technique , which he experimented with from 1844. He was partly trained by his friend Hippolyte Bayard . He used other techniques, such as albumen printing and wet collodion . He came into contact with Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor to try to improve certain processes and then became the defender of the development techniques promoted by Gustave Le Gray. His productions have remarkable pictorial qualities and reveal a great mastery of the technical stages (lighting, emulsion, development). He staged activities related to the peasant world, as well as several gender figures, helped by his steward and model named Louis Dodier. In 1854, he was a founding member of the Société française de photographie and sought to promote various techniques of development on paper from negatives and resigned in 1864 for health reasons. He published his research between 1851 and 1866 in the journal La Lumière, which was for a time the bulletin of the Société héliographique de Paris. (Source: Wikipedia)

 

To view our archive organized by themes and subjects, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS

 

For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE

The remains of the "Adolphe", which was wrecked in 1904. It now forms part of the Stockton breakwater, Newcastle, Australia

William Adolphe Bouguereau (1825-1905) - Cupid and Psyche, 1889

William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825-1905) - Dante And Virgil In Hell (1850). This painting was inspired by a short scene from the Inferno, set in the eighth circle of Hell (the circle for falsifiers and counterfeiters), where Dante, accompanied by Virgil, watches a fight between two damned souls: Capocchio, a heretic and alchemist is attacked and bitten on the neck by Gianni Schicchi who had usurped the identity of a dead man in order to fraudulently claim his inheritance. #Dante #painting #dorsaymuseum #paris

 

17 Likes on Instagram

  

Source: livinghistories.newcastle.edu.au/nodes/view/18280

 

This image was scanned from a negative in the Bert Lovett collection. It is part of the Norm Barney Photographic Collection, held by Cultural Collections at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia.

 

This image can be used for study and personal research purposes. If you wish to reproduce this image for any other purpose you must obtain permission by contacting the University of Newcastle's Cultural Collections.

 

If you have any information about this photograph, please contact us or leave a comment in the box below.

Adolphe Felix Cals 1810-1880 Frankrijk

Adolphe William Bouguereau oil paintings, art reproduction, art gallery.

  

Angel Oil Painting Art Co,.Ltd.

Add:17B,JiAnGe,BaoLong Mansion,BuJi

ShenZhen,518112 China

Email: xj8cn@yahoo.com angel@angeloilpainting.com

Tel:86-13928408619

Fax:86-755-28281991

www.angelartco.com

www.angeloilpainting.com

Maker: Louis-Adolphe Humbert de Molard (1800-1874)

Born: France

Active: France

Medium: modern gelatin silver print from original paper negative

Size: 7" x 9 1/2"

Location:

 

Object No. 2016.931

Shelf: E-25

 

Publication:

 

Other Collections:

 

Provenance: Texbraun Galerie

 

Notes: Baron Louis Adolphe Humbert de Molard, born in Paris on October 30, 1800 and died on March 17, 1874, was a French pioneer of photography. From the beginning of the 1840s, Baron Humbert de Molard became interested in the first photographic techniques. He is one of those wealthy amateurs who were passionate about this emerging art. After the death of his first wife, he remarried in 1843 with Henriette Renée Patu, miniaturist designer and lithographer, who owned land in Lagny-sur-Marne. From 1843 to 1850, he produced a series of daguerreotypes but gradually favored the calotype technique , which he experimented with from 1844. He was partly trained by his friend Hippolyte Bayard . He used other techniques, such as albumen printing and wet collodion . He came into contact with Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor to try to improve certain processes and then became the defender of the development techniques promoted by Gustave Le Gray. His productions have remarkable pictorial qualities and reveal a great mastery of the technical stages (lighting, emulsion, development). He staged activities related to the peasant world, as well as several gender figures, helped by his steward and model named Louis Dodier. In 1854, he was a founding member of the Société française de photographie and sought to promote various techniques of development on paper from negatives and resigned in 1864 for health reasons. He published his research between 1851 and 1866 in the journal La Lumière, which was for a time the bulletin of the Société héliographique de Paris. (Source: Wikipedia)

 

To view our archive organized by themes and subjects, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS

 

For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY

 

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5eUgZ2FsbGVyaXgucnU=

 

Maker: Louis-Adolph Humbert de Molard (1800-1874)

Born: France

Active: France

Medium: modern gelatin silver print

Size: 7" x 9 1/2"

Location:

 

Object No. 2016.923

Shelf: E-25

 

Publication:

 

Other Collections:

 

Provenance: Texbraun Galerie

 

Notes: Baron Louis Adolphe Humbert de Molard, born in Paris on October 30, 1800 and died on March 17, 1874, was a French pioneer of photography. From the beginning of the 1840s, Baron Humbert de Molard became interested in the first photographic techniques. He is one of those wealthy amateurs who were passionate about this emerging art. After the death of his first wife, he remarried in 1843 with Henriette Renée Patu, miniaturist designer and lithographer, who owned land in Lagny-sur-Marne. From 1843 to 1850, he produced a series of daguerreotypes but gradually favored the calotype technique , which he experimented with from 1844. He was partly trained by his friend Hippolyte Bayard . He used other techniques, such as albumen printing and wet collodion . He came into contact with Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor to try to improve certain processes and then became the defender of the development techniques promoted by Gustave Le Gray. His productions have remarkable pictorial qualities and reveal a great mastery of the technical stages (lighting, emulsion, development). He staged activities related to the peasant world, as well as several gender figures, helped by his steward and model named Louis Dodier. In 1854, he was a founding member of the Société française de photographie and sought to promote various techniques of development on paper from negatives and resigned in 1864 for health reasons. He published his research between 1851 and 1866 in the journal La Lumière, which was for a time the bulletin of the Société héliographique de Paris. (Source: Wikipedia)

 

To view our archive organized by themes and subjects, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS

 

For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE

Oil on canvas; 137х92 cm.

Rehs Galleries, Inc., New York City

Maker: Louis-Adolphe Humbert de Molard (1800-1874)

Born: France

Active: France

Medium: modern gelatin silver print from original paper negative

Size: 7" x 9 1/2"

Location:

 

Object No. 2016.929

Shelf: E-25

 

Publication: E. Bacot, A. de Brebisson, A Humbert de Molard, Trois Photographes en Basse-Normandie au XIX siecle, ARDI, Caen, 1989, pg 103

 

Other Collections: Musee Gatien Bonnet, Lagny-sur-Marne

 

Provenance: Texbraun Galerie

 

Notes: Baron Louis Adolphe Humbert de Molard, born in Paris on October 30, 1800 and died on March 17, 1874, was a French pioneer of photography. From the beginning of the 1840s, Baron Humbert de Molard became interested in the first photographic techniques. He is one of those wealthy amateurs who were passionate about this emerging art. After the death of his first wife, he remarried in 1843 with Henriette Renée Patu, miniaturist designer and lithographer, who owned land in Lagny-sur-Marne. From 1843 to 1850, he produced a series of daguerreotypes but gradually favored the calotype technique , which he experimented with from 1844. He was partly trained by his friend Hippolyte Bayard . He used other techniques, such as albumen printing and wet collodion . He came into contact with Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor to try to improve certain processes and then became the defender of the development techniques promoted by Gustave Le Gray. His productions have remarkable pictorial qualities and reveal a great mastery of the technical stages (lighting, emulsion, development). He staged activities related to the peasant world, as well as several gender figures, helped by his steward and model named Louis Dodier. In 1854, he was a founding member of the Société française de photographie and sought to promote various techniques of development on paper from negatives and resigned in 1864 for health reasons. He published his research between 1851 and 1866 in the journal La Lumière, which was for a time the bulletin of the Société héliographique de Paris. (Source: Wikipedia)

 

To view our archive organized by themes and subjects, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS

 

For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY

Interesting: since it left the artist's studio, this painting has always lived in Cleveland. It was purchased directly from the artist by a prominent Cleveland businessman, Hinman Hurlbut.

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