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Bisson Freres - Savoie 4, La Mer de Glace, Vue Prise de la Flégère
Bisson Freres
Savoie 4, La Mer de Glace, Vue Prise de la Flégère
$18,000
Bisson Freres - Cathedrale d'Amiens
Bisson Freres
Cathedrale d'Amiens
$8,500
Bisson Freres - Colonne Trajanne (Trajan's Column), Rome
Bisson Freres
Colonne Trajanne (Trajan's Column), Rome
$6,000
Bisson Freres - Le Baptistere (the Baptistry), Piasa
Bisson Freres
Le Baptistere (the Baptistry), Piasa
$4,500
Bisson Freres - Facade Principale. Detail de la Porte, Cote Nord (Notre Dame, Paris)
Bisson Freres
Facade Principale. Detail de la Porte, Cote Nord (Notre Dame, Paris)
$3,500
Bisson Frères (attributed to) - Reims Cathedral
Bisson Frères (attributed to)
Reims Cathedral
$4,000
Bisson Freres - Viaduc de l'Aubonne, pres Allaman (Canton de Vaud)
Bisson Freres
Viaduc de l'Aubonne, pres Allaman (Canton de Vaud)
$4,000
Bisson Frères (attributed to) - Church at Saint-Trophime at Arles (Two-Part Panorama)
Bisson Frères (attributed to)
Church at Saint-Trophime at Arles (Two-Part Panorama)
$750
Sale
$563
Cathedrale d'Amiens
Le Mont-Blanc et Glacier des Bossons

The Bisson brothers, Louis-Auguste (1814-1876) and Auguste-Rosalie (1826-1900) were some of the best known French photographers of their day.

The elder brother worked as an architect for the city of Paris and his younger brother worked for their father, who was a painter by trade. Their first foray together was in a firm set up by their father, Bisson Pére et Fils, that specialized in daguerreotype portraiture. In the early 1850s, after switching to the negative/positive process, they began photographing the works of Rembrandt and Durer, then turned to architectural photography. The brothers made large prints of historic monuments from all over Europe. These prints went into the making of "Reproductions photographiques des Plus Beaux Types d'Architecture", that was released in installments spanning the years 1853-1862.

Cathedrale d'Amiens
Cathedrale d'Amiens

The Bisson Fréres gained fame making large scale photographs of the glaciers of the Alps. These were exhibited at the Société Francaise de Photographie, an organization of which they were founding members.

In 1860, the brothers accompanied Napoleon III to Chamonix on a photographic expedition to commemorate the reuniting of Savoy to France. Although they did not make it to the summit of Mont Blanc on this journey, Auguste would take the first photograph from the summit in 1861.

The photographs taken of Mont Blanc and other alpine views made up an album they published of mountain photography, "Haute-Savoie, Le Mont Blanc et Ses Glaciers: Souvenir du Voyage de M. M. L'Imperatrice", (Paris) . By 1864 the brothers' partnership had dissolved due to changing tastes and a new demand for portrait photography.

Bisson Frères: Reaching for Heaven
About This Exhibit
Image List

Exhibited and Sold By
Contemporary Works / Vintage Works, Ltd.

258 Inverness Circle
Chalfont, Pennsylvania   18914   USA

Contact Alex Novak and Marthe Smith

Email info@vintageworks.net

Phone +1-215-518-6962

Call for an Appointment

 

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