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Adolphe William Bouguereau oil paintings, art reproduction, art gallery.
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William-Adolphe Bouguereau
French, 1825-1905
THE SONG OF THE NIGHTINGALE, 1895
Oil on canvas
Gift of Mr. Robert Badenhop, 1954
"Bouguereau is one of the few prominent academic artists of late nineteenth-century France whose reputation has endured following the rise of Impressionism. His characteristically smooth finish, carefully drawn and composed figures, and convincing illusionism made him one of the most successful academic painters of his generation. From 1849 until his death in 1905, he exhibited regularly at the annual Salon. In 1850, he won the coveted "Prix de Rome", a prize awarded yearly to promising artists that enabled them to study in Italy. In 1876, he was elected a member of both the "Legion d'Honneur" and the "Institut de France", confirming his high standing among the conservative artistic establishment.
This work of 1895 is typical of both Bouguereau's style and subjects. Skillfully painted, it shows a beautiful peasant girl, barefoot, her sleeves rolled up, seated on a stone bench. On a tree branch behind her shoulder a nightingale sings, and she turns her head to hear it. What her thoughts may be are hard to determine, and this ambiguity was one of the reasons for Bouguereau's success. Viewers are left to create their own stories about what is taking place in the painting. His realistic rendition of every element of the scene vouches for what he described as his commitment to "the sincere study of nature, the search for the true and the beautiful.""
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. 2016.884
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)
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Maker: André Adolphe Eugène Disdéri (1819-1889)
Born: France
Active: France
Medium: salted paper print from a waxed paper negative
Size: 4 3/8" x 6 5/8"
Location: France
Object No. 2014.841
Shelf: B-2
Publication:
Other Collections:
Provenance: Philippe Doublet
Rank: 3000
Notes: One of the most beautiful and well-preserved temples of the Roman world, the Maison Carrée ("Square House") in Nîmes was built around 20 BC by Marcus Agrippa.
Disderi was born in Paris but had to leave in 1848 for political and financial reasons and settled with his in-laws in Brest.He again had to leave his home in Brest for political reasons and spent most of 1853 in Nimes. While there he experimented with the new collodion-on-glass negative process and also with Gustave Le Gray's waxed paper negative technique. Collaborating with Joseph Jean Pierre Laurent, he was able to cut the exposure time for collodion negatives down to two seconds. They also researched ways to reinforce paper negatives. His first of several books - Manuel operatoire de photographie sur collodion instante (1853) - summarizes his Nimes research. (source: Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-Century Photography)
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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. 2016.906
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
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. 2016.886
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
Manchester Art Gallery.
Old Cab at All Saints, Manchester.
By Adolphe Valette (1876-1942).
Oil on linen & jute, 1911.
A hazy autumnal scene of a hansom cab parked at the curb of Grosvenor Square (All Saints) on Oxford Road in Manchester. The view is from Oxford Road, looking west where a horse and cab dominate the centre of the composition. Seen in profile to the left: the white horse is fed from a nosebag as it rests with a blanket over its hindquarters, whilst the driver puts his feet up and smokes a pipe. A small group of figures have paused near the horse's head at the left of the scene, as other pedestrians pass by between the cab and the wall beyond, which is topped with iron railings. Behind the wall are the silhouetted forms of trees and further back still stand the hazy masses of buildings. To the left, the building with the domed roof was formerly the Registry Office and the building to the extreme right is the corner of All Saints Church, which used to be sited in the centre of the square, before it was bombed during the Second World War.
Taken from Oxford Road and looking across All Saints, this was clearly conceived by Valette as a pendant to Hansom Cab at All Saints, painted the previous year. Valette taught at the School of Art which is just out of the picture on the left.
Adolphe Valette was born in 1876 in the industrial town of St Etienne, and came to England in 1904. He settled in Manchester and studied at the Manchester School of Art and taught there from 1906 to 1920. Amongst his students was LS Lowry.
When Valette was an art student in France, the Impressionist movement was at its height. By the end of the 19th century art galleries and collectors all over Europe were buying paintings by Monet, Renoir and others. When Valette arrived in Manchester he brought first hand knowledge of Impressionist painting with him which he was able to share with his students, including LS Lowry. ‘Forain, Monet, Degas and the French Impressionists were his gods’, as one of his students put it.
It was between 1908 and 1913 that he completed his major Impressionist Manchester cityscapes. In 1908 he produced his first Manchester painting depicting Manchester Ship Canal. He fully understood the Impressionist practice of painting en plein air, capturing an immediate visual impression of a scene and rendering the exact effect of light.
Soon after his arrival in Manchester, Valette enrolled as a student in the evening classes at the Municipal School
of Art at All Saints, now part of Manchester Metropolitan University. His talent was quickly recognised and he was encouraged to apply for the position of Master of Painting and Drawing. He accepted this post ‘on the condition that he should teach the pupils by actually painting with them.
In 1928 Valette left Manchester, due to ill health and following the death of his mother. He moved permanently to Blace in the Beaujolais region of France, settling in a cottage which he inherited from his mother and where he had spent many holidays.
Dansaert | Place Saint-Géry
Covered market built in Flemish neo-renaissance style.
Arch. Adolphe Vanderheggen
1882.
It closed in 1977.
After big renovation, an information centre dedicated to Brussels heritage opened there in 1999 ; the building and the surroundings are now one of the busiest place of the city.
Here the old fountain from Abbaye of Grimbergen erected here in 1767, long before the covered market was built around it.
Maker: Louis-Adolph 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. 2016.911
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
Maker: Adolphe Braun (1812-1877)
Born: France
Active: France
Medium: carbon print
Size: 7 5/8 in x 10 5/8 in
Location: France
Object No. 2022.687
Shelf: N-25
Publication:
Other Collections:
Provenance:
Notes: TBAL
To view our archive organized by Collections, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS
For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE
While contemporary with the Impressionists, Bouguereau's almost photographic realism is the opposite of Impressionism. When Pierre-August Renoir was being fitted with glasses, he is reported to have thrown them down, crying, "Good God, I see like Bouguereau!"
Cincinnati Art Museum
Item:
Title: Mlle George, Role d'Agrippine
Photographer: Adolphe Duperly
Publisher:
Publisher#:
Year:
Height: 9 3/8"
Width: 6 1/2"
Media: lithograph
Color: b/w
Country:
Town:
Notes: Lithographed by Langlume, rue de l'Abbaye, after a design made in Bourdeux by G. de Galard
Provenance:
For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE CARIBBEAN PHOTO ARCHIVE
ВИЛЬЯМ-АДОЛЬФ БУГРО - Волна
☆📀
Location: Private collection.
Christie's New York, 19th Century European Art including Orientalist Paintings, November 1999.
Sources: www.christies.com/lotfinder/Lot/william-adolphe-bouguerea...
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/William-Adolphe_Bouguereau
WILLIAM-ADOLPHE BOUGUREAU (1825 - 1905) was a French academic painter. In his realistic genre paintings he used mythological themes, making modern interpretations of classical subjects, with an emphasis on the female human body. During his life he enjoyed significant popularity in France and the United States, was given numerous official honors, and received top prices for his work. As the quintessential salon painter of his generation, he was reviled by the Impressionist avant-garde. By the early twentieth century, Bouguereau and his art fell out of favor with the public, due in part to changing tastes. In the 1980s, a revival of interest in figure painting led to a rediscovery of Bouguereau and his work. Throughout the course of his life, Bouguereau executed 822 known finished paintings, although the whereabouts of many are still unknown
The Postcard
A Claremont Series postcard that was posted in Oldham using a ½d. stamp on Tuesday the 31st. August 1915. It was sent to:
Mrs. Clegg,
c/o Mrs. Jackson,
14 Grafton Road,
Off Alexandra Road,
Morecambe.
The message on the divided back of the card was as follows:
"Dear Florrie,
Hoping you are having
a fine time over there
as I am here.
The weather has not
kept me in.
With fondest love from
Annie W. xxxx"
The Death of an Ace Pilot
So what else happened on the day that Annie posted the card?
Well, on the 31st. August 1915, the first-ever French flying ace, Adolphe Pégoud, was killed in combat. He had scored six victories.
Pégoud was shot down and killed by Unteroffizier Otto Kandulski, who had been his pupil, while intercepting a German reconnaissance aircraft. Adolphe was 26 years old when he died.
The same German crew later dropped a funeral wreath behind the French lines.
Two weeks later, Kandulski was shot down by the French pilot Roger Ronserail, earning Ronserail the title "Le Vengeur de Pégoud" ("The avenger of Pégoud").
The Central Technical School
Also on that day, the Central Technical School was established in Toronto in order to offer high school students courses in visual arts and technical studies.
Gretl Braun
The 31st. August 1915 also marked the birth in Munich of the German matriarch Gretl Braun. Gretl, who was sister to Eva Braun, was a member of the inner social circle of Adolf Hitler at the Berghof.
Gretl in fact became the sister-in-law of Hitler following his marriage to Eva, less than 40 hours before the couple killed themselves.
Gretl Braun married SS-Gruppenführer Hermann Fegelein, a liaison officer on Hitler's staff, on the 3rd. June 1944. In the closing days of World War II, Fegelein was shot for desertion.
Despite Gretl's ties to the Nazi regime, she managed to survive the war nearly completely unscathed. She changed her name, remarried, and lived a quiet life until her death in 1987.
Europe Europa
Belgique België Belgium Belgien Belgica
Bruxelles Brussel Brussels Brüssel Bruxelas
Boulevard Adolphe Max
This image forms part of the digitised photographs of the Ross and Pat Craig Collection. Ross Craig (1926-2012) was a local historian born in Stockton and dedicated much of his life promoting and conserving the history of Stockton, NSW. He possessed a wealth of knowledge about the suburb and was a founding member of the Stockton Historical Society and co-editor of its magazine. Pat Craig supported her husbandâs passion for history, and together they made a great contribution to the Stockton and Newcastle communities. We thank the Craig Family and Stockton Historical Society who have kindly given Cultural Collections at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia, access to the collection and allowed us to publish the images. Thanks also to Vera Deacon for her liaison in attaining this important collection.
Please contact Cultural Collections at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia, if you are the subject of the image, or know the subject of the image, and have cultural or other reservations about the image being displayed on this website and would like to discuss this with us.
Some of the images were scanned from original photographs in the collection held at Cultural Collections, other images were already digitised with no provenance recorded.
You are welcome to freely use the images for study and personal research purposes. Please acknowledge as âCourtesy of the Ross and Pat Craig Collection, University of Newcastle (Australia)" For commercial requests please consider making a donation to the Vera Deacon Regional History Fund.
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I was very lucky to capture the last streams of light. One of my favorite shot.
Lac Borne, Saint-Adolphe-d'Howard, Canada
Dutch postcard, no. 949. Photo: publicity still for the stage production of A jó tündér/Die Fee/The Good Fairy by Ferenc Molnar, written in 1930.
Impressive Dutch actor Adolphe Engers (1884-1945) appeared in some 50 German and Dutch films in the 1920s and 1930s.
For more postcards, a bio and clips check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
In a Private Collection
William-Adolphe Bouguereau
French Academic Classicist Artist
Genre Painter
1825 – 1905
In this tender piece two sisters are escaping with a basket of stolen apples. The older sister is gently helping the younger off of a wall. One gets the sense when looking at this piece that the two girls have done this many times before, causing the love, companionship, and sense of shared mischief to be clearly and tenderly captured. This work is a great example of Bouguereau's amazing sense of composition. Both sisters are centered with the space between them being in the almost exact center of the canvas; the younger sister's knee countering the older sisters head. The green foliage hanging off the left side of the wall perfectly offsets the bush in the lower right; and the apples in the lower left are countered by the light area in the upper right. Even the wall is balanced with the bricks peaking through the wall to the lower left and the grass poking through on the upper right. Bouguereau painted another image of a young thief 28 years later called Little Thief which is an image of a young girl sitting on a wall, holding a single pear and smiling mischievously.
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. 2016.885
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