Notre-Dame de Paris in Pictures By Kristi Finefield
Many of those around the world watching news coverage of the terrible fire at Notre-Dame in Paris likely either reflected on a visit to the cathedral in their lifetime or felt a pang of regret at having not made it there before the fire. I personally thought back on my trip to Notre Dame as a young architecture student more than 20 years ago. Standing just inside the entrance, I was overwhelmed by the sheer size and struck silent by the centuries of history surrounding me. Like most architecture students, I was trained to record and analyze what I saw through both pen and camera. Looking through our collections yesterday, I found wonderful examples of how artists, photographers and architects have captured Notre-Dame de Paris over the years through their own medium. As we learn what was saved and what was lost in the fire, let's take a look back. I'll start with how two American architects whose works appear in our collections sketched Notre Dame. On the left, we have the work of Cass Gilbert, architect of the Woolworth Building in New York and the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. as well as hundreds of other buildings. During a visit to Paris in 1880, he put ink to paper, recording meticulous detail of the cathedral. Gilbert visited not long after extensive renovations added a spire back to the cathedral under the guidance of Eugène Viollet-le-Duc. Sadly, the spire, in the background of the sketch, collapsed in the fire this week. On the right, modernist architect Victor Lundy took a much bolder approach when he created this vibrant watercolor of the cathedral during a 1948 visit. Sketch of bit of restored work on Notre Dame de Paris, restored by Viollet-le-Duc. Ink drawing by Cass Gilbert, 1880 May 6. http://bit.ly/2XpqgWO | Notre Dame, Paris. Watercolor drawing by Victor Lundy, 1949 January 18. http://bit.ly/2Is1X7c | The photochrom process, a combination of black-and-white photography and color lithography, was used to create these vivid views of the cathedral in the last decade of the 19th century: Paris. Notre Dame. Photochrom, circa 1890-1906. http://bit.ly/2PjaidH Notre Dame, interior, Paris, France. Photochrom, between circa 1890 and 1900. http://bit.ly/2vbu5CX Notre Dame, and St. Michael bridge, Paris, France. Photochrom, between circa 1890 and 1900. http://bit.ly/2Pgy5LA The two photographs below show an earlier Notre Dame. A stereograph from circa 1865 shows the 19th-century renovations still underway. The second view, taken between 1851 and 1870 by early French architectural photographer Edouard Baldus places Notre Dame in the landscape of Paris: Notre Dame, Paris. Photo, published by George Stacy, circa 1865. http://bit.ly/2XiGK2E Paris. Panorama. Photo by Edouard Baldus, between 1851 and 1870. http://bit.ly/2ItOVG0 Printmakers have also been fond of the subject of Notre Dame, as seen in the views below: Paris. Notre Dame. Lithograph by Charles Rivière, between 1870 and 1879. http://bit.ly/2XpqNrM Notre Dame I, bookstalls. Print by Hans Figura. http://bit.ly/2Pk3yfN | West front of the Church of Notre Dame. Engraving by J. Tingle, 1828 Sep. 30. http://bit.ly/2XlXfen | In the coming years, we hope rebuilding the lost parts of the cathedral will inspire new drawings, photos and prints for us to reflect on in the future. Learn More:
Published April 18, 2019 at 09:14AM Read more on https://loc.gov |
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