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FRATELLI ALINARI (19th) Circle, France: Le Louvre, Paris, around 1880, albumen paper print Fratelli Alinari (19th century) Circle: France: "Le Louvre", Palais du Louvre, Paris, former residence of the French kings, c. 1880, albumen paper print Technique: albumen paper print, mounted on Cardboard Inscription: Handwritten title at the bottom of the box. Date: c. 1880 Description: Original photograph with high sharpness of detail. An early testimony to travel photography. Around the middle of the 19th century, more and more tourists from middle-class circles travelled in Europe. At that time, photographs could only be taken with a great deal of time and expensive, unwieldy equipment. This made many tourists all the more grateful for the work of the professional photographer's studios on site to bring back a souvenir from afar for those who stayed at home or to collect as souvenirs. The photographers photographed the most famous sights of their hometowns and went on trips themselves to photograph the most popular destinations of their clients and offer them as albumen prints. Ancient art treasures were also photographed and offered to travellers. The high-quality photographs of sculptures and frescoes continued to make an important contribution to documenting art treasures and making them accessible to scholars from all over Europe, who previously had to rely on tracings or engravings if they could not view the original for themselves. Keywords: 19th century, Historicism, Architecture, France, Size: Cardboard: 34,2 cm x 27,2 cm (13,5 x 10,7 in), Depiction: 18,0 cm x 12,0 cm (7,1 x 4,7 in)

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FRATELLI ALINARI (19th) Circle, France: Le Louvre, Paris, around 1880, albumen paper print Fratelli Alinari (19th century) Circle: France: "Le Louvre", Palais du Louvre, Paris, former residence of the French kings, c. 1880, albumen paper print Technique: albumen paper print, mounted on Cardboard Inscription: Handwritten title at the bottom of the box. Date: c. 1880 Description: Original photograph with high sharpness of detail. An early testimony to travel photography. Around the middle of the 19th century, more and more tourists from middle-class circles travelled in Europe. At that time, photographs could only be taken with a great deal of time and expensive, unwieldy equipment. This made many tourists all the more grateful for the work of the professional photographer's studios on site to bring back a souvenir from afar for those who stayed at home or to collect as souvenirs. The photographers photographed the most famous sights of their hometowns and went on trips themselves to photograph the most popular destinations of their clients and offer them as albumen prints. Ancient art treasures were also photographed and offered to travellers. The high-quality photographs of sculptures and frescoes continued to make an important contribution to documenting art treasures and making them accessible to scholars from all over Europe, who previously had to rely on tracings or engravings if they could not view the original for themselves. Keywords: 19th century, Historicism, Architecture, France, Size: Cardboard: 34,2 cm x 27,2 cm (13,5 x 10,7 in), Depiction: 18,0 cm x 12,0 cm (7,1 x 4,7 in)

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