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Artist's
Biography
Edouard Baldus was born in 1820 in France
and worked as a painter in the 1840s photography
peeked his interest. He was a founding member
of the
Societe Heliographique
and an important influence to the art of heliogravure,
a photomechanical process. He used the calotype
process from 1851 and began using collodion
wet-plate negatives and albumen prints in
1956.
A pioneer of the photographic medium, he documented
architectureal monuments of France as well
as landscpes, paintings and the documentation
of the Rhone Floods. In 1851 he was commissioned
by the Comite des Monuments Historiques to
photograph monuments in Paris, Fontainebleau,
Burgundy, the Dauphine, Normandy, Auvergne
and Provence. During 1854-1855 Baldus created
1,500 photographs of a new wing of the Louvre
in Paris and was commissioned by Baron James
de Rothschild to photograph the railroad lines
in France.
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